Our Living Tradition: Second and Third Series 9781487578602

In this book, distinguished scholars and writers of today discuss leading figures in the history of Canadian letters and

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Our Living Tradition: Second and Third Series
 9781487578602

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OUR LIVING TRADITION

OUR LIVING TRADITION Second and Third Series

Edited by Robert L. McDougall

Published in association with Carleton University by University of Toronto Press

Copyright © 1959, by University of Toronto Press Toronto, Canada Reprinted in 2018 ISBN 978-1-4875-7925-8 (paper) Library of Congress Catalog Card No. A58-526

PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION by Robert L. McDougall

vu

CONTRIBUTORS

xv

SECOND SERIES

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON by Robert L. McDougall

3

GEORGE BROWN by J.M. S. Careless

31

PHILIPPE AUBERT DE GASPE by J. S. Tassie

55

DuNCAN CAMPBELL ScoTT by A. J.M. Smith

73

SIR RoBERT BORDEN by James A. Gibson

95

E. J. PRATT AND Hrs CRrncs by Earle Birney

123

THIRD SERIES

F. H. VARLEY by Barker Fairley

151

FRAN«;:ors-XAVIER GARNEAU by Guy Sylvestre

170

JoHN S. EWART by David M. L. Farr

185

Lours JOSEPH PAPINEAU by Jean Bruchesi

215

EGERTON RYERSON by Robin S. Harris

244

ISABELLA VALANCY CRAWFORD by James Reaney

268 V

INTRODUCTION

A series of lectures publicized under the title "Our Living Tradition" was begun at Carleton University in January, 1957. For seven successive Saturday evenings, in the intimate setting of the library on the old university site at First Avenue and Lyon, seven guest lecturers spoke in turn about seven distinguished Canadians of the past. When the lectures were published the following winter by the University of Toronto Press, Dr. C. T. Bissell, then in his second year as president of Carleton, referred in his Introduction to the fact that the volume reproduced the texts of public lectures delivered at the University. Nothing was said, however, of the circumstances which had led up to the inauguration of the series. These circumstances were a little complicated; but they are interesting, they can now be related, and I think they are worth relating here not only because they chart the beginnings of what is probably an important development in the field of Canadian studies, but also because they will help to make clear the nature and scope of the present book and (in so far as this is necessary) of its predecessor. When I say that the circumstances can now be related, I do not mean that these circumstances were mysterious. There was never any mystery at Carleton, and most certainly none in Dr. Bissell's mind, about the relation of the "Living Tradition" lecture series to the development at the University vii

INTRODUCTION

of a much broader programme of Canadian studies than the University's sponsorship of such a lecture series alone would suggest. But the broader programme, which was primarily a programme for postgraduate studies in the cultural history of Canada, involved the examination of new principles for degree work (the approach was to be inter-disciplinary), and the setting-up of new courses and a certain amount of new administrative machinery; and these were matters, as is commonly the case even in institutions as uncluttered by precedent as Carleton, that would have to mature slowly. The public lectures, on the other hand, could be launched without reference to the internal organization of the University. As it turned out, it was not until July, 1957, nearly six months after the conclusion of the first lecture series, that work on the larger scheme was sufficiently advanced to warrant the establishment officially at Carleton of an Institute of Canadian Studies; and indeed a second series of "Our Living Tradition," the series of 1958, had been added to the first before the sphere of the Institute's activities could be said to be fully defined. The larger scheme subsumed by the formation of the Institute of Canadian Studies was the product of some serious thought about what a university in Carleton's position should undertake to do specially, and especially well, beyond providing the best instruction possible in the standard subjects of the liberal arts curriculum which it acknowledged as its core. I mean partly Carleton's position as a young institution fast becoming a full-fledged university; but more than this I mean Carleton's position geographically. Universities, of course, should not differ fundamentally in kind, and in this respect the fact that Carleton is situated in Ottawa rather than in Calgary could scarcely matter less. A university, as Newman made abundantly clear nearly a century ago, is a place where knowledge is pursued for its own sake, without reference to the so-called "needs" of society. Yet it is nonsense to suggest that a university should not pursue (though still for its own sake) one field of knowledge more emphatically than another. And it is at this point that geography, which in this country is always a kind of Leviathan or lurking presence, has someviii

INTRODUCTION

thing to say about how a university should go about developing its own particular genius. Why not, then, make Carleton a centre for special programmes of study which would frankly recognize the proximity of the University to the National Library, the Library of Parliament, the Public Archives of Canada, and to the many other sources of information about Canada, both past and present, which the machinery of federal government drew into the vortex of Ottawa? Why not, indeed? It nevertheless takes a certain amount of imagination to think along these lines, and a certain amount of faith to put the thinking into practice. The establishment at Carleton in 1953 of a School of Public Administration for the purpose of bringing scholarly techniques to bear upon a wide range of subjects relating to governmental services was one such act of faith and imagination. A second (eight departments in the humanities and social sciences co-operating) was the establishment in 1957 of an Institute of Canadian Studies. These facts, as I have already indicated, may be regarded merely as facts for the record-useful in a limited way, now or later, for what they reveal of the origins of an educational programme of more than local significance. I suppose they may also be regarded (to put usefulness in another quarter) as an advertisement for good graduate students and endowment funds, both of which will be warmly received at Carleton. More immediately they may not seem to tell the reader much more than that the Institute of Canadian Studies inaugurated the "Living Tradition" lecture series, and that it probably meant business in doing so. A closer look, however, will show also the kind of business that was meant. What was chiefly meant was an approach, through a series of public lectures, to the whole difficult question of tradition in Canada-difficult because to this day the country remains uncertain of the uses of its past, and particularly of those aspects of its past that have to do with ideas and values rather than events. Tradition may seem too grand a word to apply to achievements which have little significance beyond the nation's boundaries and which seem less than monumental even within the nation itself. But if tradition is thought of more as a process than an achievement-as a process of inix

INTRODUCTION

terpenetration between the present and the past-then the acquiring of tradition is just as much the business of thii nation as it is the business of any nation that aspires to a vigorous intellectual life. And surely the acquiring of this kind of tradition, which is really very hard work, is especially the business of the universities, who fulfil their highest function when they connect facts as well as collect them. However this may be elsewhere, at any rate, the Institute of Canadian Studies in particular accepts the premise that disinterested inquiry into Canada's past is a legitimate form of university work and an efficient means of developing in Canadians the historic sense-the sense, that is, in T. S. Eliot's phrase, "not only of the pastness of the past, but of its presence." The lnstitute's proposal, therefore, for a longterm programme of lectures by Canadians about Canadians of another age was no more and no less than an extension of its reason for existence as an academic organization. This fact has shaped the character of the present volume in several ways. The collection of essays which follows, for instance, has not been designed as a statement that the Canadian tradition is one thing rather than another, any more than it has been designed as a eulogy of departed "genius." A meeting has been arranged-or rather a succession of meetings-between Canada's past and Canada's present. In order that the exchanges between intellects and imaginations may be precise and concrete, the meetings are on a person-to-person basis: Careless with Brown, Smith with Scott, Farr with Ewart, and so on. The Institute has not assumed that the Canadian tradition is confined to the group of Canadians dealt with in the series-or, to put it another way, that the Canadian tradition is confined to the nineteen Canadians of the whole series rather than to fifty or one hundred. It has had one main concern throughout: to secure a creative view of the past from the vantage point of the present through a happy conjunction of speaker and subject. Believing, moreover, that an approach to the question of tradition which attaches more importance to the process than to some single product of the process should be a composite of many viewX

INTRODUCTION

points, the Institute has tried to ensure that present meets past on the widest possible front. It has asked the historian to speak, the literary critic, the journalist, the educationist, the government administrator, the librarian, the novelist, the poet, and the painter; and, amongst these, it has sought out, as a rule, the man whose outlook is broad rather than narrow. Seeking another kind of range, the Institute has fought Leviathan geography as best it may to bring speakers to Ottawa from whatever point the needle has swung towhether to Toronto or Vancouver, ,vinnipeg or Quebec City-at the suggestion of a promising lecture. To all contributors to the series it has given no other prescription than the bare name of a subject. This much understood, talk about intentions has no further relevance. The role of the sponsoring body, it will be clear, was never meant to be obtrusive, and at this point, as the reader confronts the book which is an end-product of the whole scheme, it can fairly be said to be refined out of existence. There is in fact a great deal of value here that is not in the least dependent on the context supplied above. Dr. Bissell, introducing an earlier volume of Our Living Tradition to the reading public, said that he thought the seven studies of the first series retained in print the qualities of "clarity, directness and liveliness" that had made them good fare for audiences in Ottawa; and I see no reason at all to make a lesser claim for the essays printed in this volume. What is accomplished over the collection as a whole towards the definition of a Canadian tradition or traditions is another matter and something the reader is free to judge or not as he pleases. It was certainly never expected that the lecturers would speak with one voice in this respect, nor do they. Some refer openly to one aspect or another of a Canadian tradition, as they see it, and shape their texts accordingly. Amongst these there is a good deal of variety in the naming of main and secondary streams. Others, on the other hand, give the question of tradition no more than a nod in passing, while still others to all appearances ignore it completely. But this is quite as it should be, and the reader is simply invited to xi

INTRODUCTION

make if he chooses his own construction on the testimony which these studies make available to him. Discovering how many shapes can be built out of the blocks provided is a good game, and instructive too, and the more participants the better. In the meantime the lecture series, as a public undertaking, has fulfilled the simple end it was designed to serve: it has brought the present and the past together in such a way as to produce a lively and varied discourse, through which, in turn, is developed a perception "not only of the pastness of the past, but of its presence." One is grateful to the speakers whose skill and hard work has made such excellent sense of the word "living" in the title of the book. I have only to add an apology and an acknowledgment. The apology, which is perhaps unnecessary since the reader gains more than he loses by the circumstance, is for the appearance of both the second and third series of "Our Living Tradition" in a single volume. The break in uniformity of presentation (one series, one volume) is caused by the fact that the second series of 1958 was for unavoidable reasons so long delayed in preparation for the press that it threatened to trip over the heels of the third series of 1959 on its way to the bookstores. It was decided, therefore, as a matter of convenience and as an economy shared partly by the reader, to issue the two series together. The acknowledgment is made to Dr. Bissell, whose connection with the "Living Tradition" series came to an end with his appointment as president of the University of Toronto in the summer of 1958. Since the series will lapse temporarily next year to make way for other projects which the Institute has in hand, the moment is opportune for a tribute to the man who, more than anyone else, was responsible for bringing both the Institute of Canadian Studies and the "Living Tradition" lecture series into being. This tribute could be largely a matter of record, of a piece with other facts presented in the first part of this Introduction. But it is much more than this. It is an expression of affection and respect on the part of all those who worked with Dr. Bissell and had reason to know the imagination, the always amiable strength of purpose, the energy and executive xii

INTRODUCTION

skill which he put into the task of securing the foundations for Canadian studies at Carleton University.

L. McDOUGALL Director, Institute of Canadian Studies Carleton University, Ottawa June, 1959 ROBERT

xiii

CONTRIBUTORS

ROBERT L. McDOUGALL is Director of the Institute of Canadian Studies at Carleton University, and Associate Professor in the Department of English. Co-author (with Robin S. Harris) of The Undergraduate Essay, he has recently edited Life in the Clearings in Pioneer Books and The Clockmaker in the New Canadian Library series.

J.

M. S. CARELESS, Professor and newly appointed Chairman of the Department of History, University of Toronto, is the author of Canada, a Story of Challenge and will shortly publish a definitive biography of George Brown.

J.

S. T Assrn, Associate Professor and Chairman of the Department of French at Carleton University, is a specialist in the language and literature of French Canada.

A. J. M. SMITH is Professor of English at Michigan State University. He is the editor of The Book of Canadian Poetry and is himself a wellknown poet, whose News of the Phoenix won the Governor-General's Award for Poetry in 1943. JAMES A. GIBSON, formerly of the Foreign Service Office, Department of External Affairs, is Professor of History at Carleton University and Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Science. He is a contributor to numerous learned journals, especially on Canadian federation and foreign policy. EARLE BIRNEY, F.R.S.C., is Professor of English at the University of British Columbia. He is well known as a poet (The Strait of Anian, Trial of a City) and as a novelist (Turvey, Down the Long Table). xv

CONTRIBUTORS

BARKER FAIRLEY, F.R.S.C., formerly Head of the Department of German, University College, University of Toronto, is now Special Lecturer in the Department. He is the author of important studies of Goethe and Heine; he is also an artist, whose portraits were recently exhibited in Toronto and whose book of Georgian Bay Sketches was published in 1957. Guy SYLVESTRE, F.R.S.C., is Associate Librarian in the Library of Parliament, Ottawa. Widely recognized as an authority on the literature of French Canada, his most recent publication is his Anthologie de la poesie canadienne franr;aise. DAVID M. L. FARR is Associate Professor and Chairman of the Department of History at Carleton University and the author of The Colonial Office and Canada, 1867-1887. JEAN BRUCHESI, F.R.S.C., is the author of some twenty books on the history of Canada, on literature, education and international affairs. UnderSecretary of the Province of Quebec for many years, he is now serving as Canadian Ambassador to Spain. ROBIN S. HARRIS is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Toronto, and a member of the Toronto Board of Education. He is co-author of The Undergraduate Essay and co-compiler of A Bibliography of Higher Education, now in preparation for the press. JAMES REANEY's poetry has won him two Governor-General's Awards, for The Red Heart and A Suit of Nettles. He is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Manitoba.

xvi

ROBERT L. MCDOUGALL ON

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

Thomas Chandler Haliburton wrote and published fifteen books between 1825 and 1860. Many of these ran almost immediately to six or seven editions, and the Clockmaker series, in which Sam Slick made his first appearance, was reprinted in whole or in part some forty times in Haliburton's lifetime. Haliburton titles are reported to have been seen in places as remote as a log shanty on the banks of the Mississippi and a station in the Scandinavian Arctic. A review of the first series of The Clockmaker printed in Blackwood's Magazine in 1837 declared enthusiastically that Haliburton's was the long-awaited, authentic voice from the New World which both spelled the end of the treacle-and-water diet of Washington Irving and promised to put new life into European literature. Justin McCarthy in his later life recalled the time when Sam Slick was as well known to English readers as Sam Weller; and Carlyle, always alert to the symbolism of public names, wrote the name of Sam Slick into the text of Past and Present. On this side of the Atlantic, the American humorist Artemus Ward is said to have called Haliburton "The Father of American Humour"; and, confusing the record a little, a distinguished Harvard professor thought it his duty to warn Americans against the inaccuracies of Haliburton's portrait of a Yankee pedlar. Haliburton himself, though sometimes overshadowed by Mr. Slick, who in fact was more than once 3

OUR LIVING TRADITION

assumed to be the author of the books in which he appeared, held his own as a celebrity. Listening to him begin a speech in the Nova Scotian House of Assembly in 1826, Joseph Howe dropped his reporter's pencil and surrendered himself to the oratory of the member from Annapolis Royal. The people of Nova Scotia read his books, talked about him, and made his name synonymous with cherished dreams of a native literature. And if it is fame, as I think perhaps it is, to be missed when one is out of the country by friends prominent in public life because one is a wit and good at whooping it up with the boys in the back room of a bar, then Haliburton enjoyed this kind of fame too. On the more sober side of the record, the University of Oxford conferred on him, after his removal to England in the closing years of his life, an honorary D.C.L. All this was a hundred years ago, when there were only some colonial provinces in this northern half of the continent and Confederation had not yet been invented. You will not mistake what I have said for a biographical sketch, though the information listed may be of some service to this end. I have another purpose in mind, which is to show you in the scattered record evidence of an impressive reputation. The fact that this reputation was firmly established in those quarters which we have always believed count most-that is, in England and the United States-is encouraging. Not just little Nova Scotia, we can say, with our usual mixture of pride and diffidence, but the better part of the Englishspeaking world took note of Thomas Chandler Haliburton. It is, however, a different story if we then ask what has become of this image of a celebrity since the celebrity's death in 1865. The facts are simple for part of the answer at least. Present-day accounts of the American tradition in literature assign no place to Haliburton, whose claims to be considered the founding-father of an American strain of humour have been, after all, understandably diminished by the fact of his not being home-grown. Similarly, and again understandably, Haliburton's name today finds little or no place in the annals of England's writers and men of affairs. And, as I have already hinted, I suspect that this exclusion or neglect or what4

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

ever you want to call it comes about in both countries, not really on the grounds of quality (for writing of much less merit than Haliburton's is preserved in both England and the United States), but rather for the simple reason that this writer does not belong to either country-if you will, is not a part of either's living tradition. Clearly Haliburton is ours or nobody's, part of our living tradition or of no living tradition. What, then, do we make of him nearly a century after his death? It would be easy to say, "Not very much," and that would be substantially true. I know that over the past few months several people have asked me what I was going to talk about in this lecture series, and I have said "Haliburton," and they have either said "Who's he?" or changed the subject. It may just be that I have spoken to the wrong people. Yet, if there is indeed little awareness of this man and his work, it is not surprising. Learning to live with the colonial mentality, which is what we have had to do these hundred years past, has been a task so rigorous and encompassing as to constitute in itself an important part of our tradition. The value of the whole process has been that it has acted constantly as a check to the more clamorous aspects of national sentiment, and that it has in the end taught us the neat trick of finding our own identity by looking out beyond our borders. But there has also been a debit entry: the colonial mentality has made us reluctant custodians of the facts of our own cultural history. A colonial people, as Disraeli noted long ago, becomes civilized very soon, but its civilization is second-hand. The only traditions worthy of the name, at least in the field of letters, are thus thought to reside with the parent culture of Great Britain, or (though this is less generally palatable) with the culture of the United States, which appears to be, though it is not, a much older and richer one than ours. It is the contributors to these traditions who must be our guides and mentors. It is therefore quite in the nature of things that our historical consciousness, as applied to the materials of Canada's past, to a tradition or traditions which by a subtle alchemy we have made our own, is a stunted faculty; and no more is it surprising that the figure of Hali5

OUR LIVING TRADITION

burton, in company with many others, has become indistinct with the passage of the years. Still, I do not wish to dwell on this theme of neglected authors. It can be a little tiresome. Let me simply urge that it is about time we gave some serious thought to the task of developing, by such means as lie at our disposal, a sensitivity to our country's past. And the present lecture series is of course one such means. Its title, "Our Living Tradition," seems to me to encourage a positive approach by implying that we have a tradition--or, as I should prefer to say, traditions-and that these traditions have the essential quality of vitality. I believe it invites us to regard the men and women of our past as part of a continuing conference of minds; to regard them as being related, directly or indirectly, to a continuity of discourse reaching down into, and to some extent modifying, the nation's present stock of ideas, values, and practices. In what follows, I should like to respond rather openly to its promptings. Hindsight allows us to place important men of the past in the stance for which we think they should be remembered. Sketching Haliburton's reputation amongst his contemporaries a moment ago, I emphasized his fame as an author. But contemporary opinion can be wrong. The fact is that Haliburton was a public servant as well as a writer of books; and though the roles were by no means unrelated in his life, we may fairly ask whether it is by virtue of one rather than the other that he participates in the continuity of our traditions. Perhaps we answer almost automatically in favour of the role of the writer, remembering the natural capacity for survival possessed by books. Yet Sir John A. Macdonald, Edward Blake, and Sir Wilfrid Laurier contributed to the cultural development of Canada by expressing their thoughts, and it may be even their sense of propriety and beauty, in terms of public action; and Joseph Howe, who wrote numerous poems and essays, is linked with the Canadian present much less by what he wrote than by his actions in a political arena. Haliburton's case is not to be decided out of hand. 6

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

It was to be expected that this man should seek, and find with some degree of success, an outlet for his talents in public service. He was, one might say, of the brahmin class. He was descended on both sides of the family from good New England stock, transplanted to Nova Scotia some years before the American Revolution. His father had been a lawyer, a Clerk of the Peace, then a King's Counsellor, a judge, and an early member of the provincial House of Assembly. The young Haliburton was sent to King's College, Windsor, which was an institution of higher learning made up entirely of the right people, and which for its unwavering support of privilege and the concept of an established Anglican Church would have pleased the heart of Bishop Strachan. The law and public service were natural ends for a man of such origins and training. In due course, therefore, Haliburton became a lawyer, and then a judge-rising in the latter capacity from an initial appointment as Justice of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas to a final appointment, not long before his removal to England, to the Supreme Court bench. I think the odds are against a judge contributing conspicuously in his official role to our living traditions, though I might be wrong. We do not at any rate find an instance in Haliburton. The spirit of buffoonery and the irrepressible wit which became the very life and soul of Sam Slick undoubtedly enlivened many of the sittings over which Haliburton presided; and newspaper reporters sometimes attended expressly to hear the fun. But within the context of a developing Canadian judiciary the custodian of traditions is likely to be nonplussed by the record of a man who apparently liked to play the merry lad with counsel, and who, when a citizen named for jury service pleaded exemption because of a severe case of the itch, cried "Scratch him!" There were serious moments, of course, so that the dignity of the courts was sufficiently, if not signally, upheld. But the consensus of experts is that Haliburton's judgments, as recorded, show competence and a rigid adherence to principle, but no remarkable insights into the workings of the law. Looking back, we detect the aura of a vigorous personality. The courtroom, however, masks rather than 7

OUR LIVING TRADITION

reveals the man, and we are forced to seek a better line of communication than this. Haliburton the man of provincial politics is at first sight a more promising figure. But only at first sight. Nevertheless, this curtailment of potential has such a strong if indirect bearing on the whole question of tradition in this country as to deserve a moment's thought. In this case the man who acts is not separate from the man who creates in the field of literature, and I shall return to this area of political issues later when I speak of Haliburton as a man of letters. But here I should like to isolate momentarily the image of a man who was dedicated once, though briefly, to political action. The political contest for which the stage was being set when Haliburton was elected a member for Annapolis Royal in 1826 must be recognized as the most significant contest of our history. The issues of Confederation are pale beside the ones of these earlier days; and Confederation itself, when placed against the outcome of the struggles of the thirties and forties, which was the winning of responsible government for the provinces, appears only as a punctuation mark concluding a sentence already written. The situation in which Haliburton became involved, I suppose like most political situations, was extremely complex; but what was at stake in principle was quite clear. The colony of Nova Scotia was on the point of redefining its relation to the mother country. Some half-century earlier, the New England states, which were colonies no older historically than Nova Scotia, had come to a similarly crucial point of decision, had rebelled against the parent state, and in successful revolution had won for themselves complete independence and the right to build forthwith a new nation on the North American continent. Nova Scotia, in common with the other British provinces of Upper and Lower Canada, might now seek the same end. Certainly the thrust of forces within the maritime colony in the direction of some measure of independence was unmistakable. Moreover, so far had the situation changed on the other side of the Atlantic (for this was the era of reform and radicalism and of quests for freedom in many European 8

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

states) that even in England there was a sentiment in favour of severing colonial ties. Still, there were other considerations. Could a new and autonomous state arise out of the British provinces of the north overnight? Or, if it did, could it long maintain its identity alongside the aggressive civilization to the south? Again, were there not perhaps qualities worth preserving in the colonial ties themselves? And could sober citizens, with the memory of the blood-baths of the French and American revolutions still fresh, look with much heart towards the extreme measures of another war of liberation? It is impossible in a few sentences to give a just account of the many, many sides to the colonial question in this most momentous time in our history. But beneath all the complexities can be seen plainly an impulse towards separation-an impulse which, as we have learned forcibly in the twentieth century, is seminal in any colonial situation. And it is clear too that this impulse had in Haliburton's time, in Nova Scotia as in the Canadas, three possible courses before it: to be cut off at the roots with colonial status reaffirmed; to find its fulfilment in complete and immediate independence; or, by compromise, to be transformed in such a way as to produce a new and hybrid plant. You will know how the question was answered, because you will recognize in Canada today the hybrid plant. If Haliburton had been one of those who led the way-and he had eminently the powers for leadership-we would count him amongst the makers of our nation and, specifically, amongst the makers of our central political traditions. But he was not. When Haliburton took his seat in the House of Assembly in 1826, the complex forces which I have briefly described were bringing pressure to bear on particular issues. Colonial government at this time was so organized as to concentrate both executive and, in the final analysis, legislative power in the hands of the Governor and an appointed Executive Council. The Governor was in theory the Crown's representative, but in fact he was responsible directly to the Colonial Office in London. The other arm of government was the elected House of Assembly, and this arm was beginning to feel restive in the role of a kind of House of Commons which 9

OUR LIVING TRADITION

was the voice of the people of Nova Scotia (at least as far as the electoral laws of the time permitted) but which was without real power to govern. Tension was aggravated, moreover, by the fact that there existed in the Maritimes during these years, as in Upper Canada, a family-compact type of administration which laid a restrictive hand on political life. The Council, as a body of special privilege whose members were tied to the Crown by the strings of appointment, seemed to have a monopoly on preferment. Its abuses of its powers were flagrant, and it was, of course, in a position to block any reform legislation passed on to it by the House of Assembly. Haliburton, by virtue of convictions nourished by his family background and strengthened by his education at King's College, was a true-blue Tory. It was hardly to be expected, therefore, that he would lead the attack against the ruling oligarchy. But this is just what he did in his early days in the House of Assembly-a fact, I must add, that was to prove highly disconcerting to his chief biographer and critic, V. L. 0. Chittick, who can see in Haliburton's championship of reform at this time only a deplorable inconsistency with his later behaviour. The Tory mind, however, is not necessarily insensitive to the abuse of privilege or inevitably opposed to the correction of institutions which seem to have deteriorated from their pristine state. When the stand taken by the Assembly appeared to be simply a stand against the misuse of powers by a privileged few, Haliburton supported the call for reform. Marvellous to relate, he even helped to initiate legislation for the good of the people of Nova Scotia at large and tried to block measures petitioned by the ruling oligarchy which he thought were aimed primarily against the poor. And in so doing he led blistering attacks on the incompetence of the Executive Council. Indeed, it was for one of these, in which he described the Council as a body of "twelve dignified, deep read, pensioned old ladies . . . filled with prejudices and whims like all other antiquated spinsters," that he had forced upon him, standing as a martyr at the bar of the House of Assembly, a motion of censure. On the other hand, it was a very different matter when the IO

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

attention of the House, and of the Reformers led by Joseph Howe, began to concentrate, not on what Haliburton called the "minor features of the law" (which he thought might be modified according to circumstances), but on constitutional issues fundamental to the regulation of colonial government. The term "responsible government" meant many things to many men; but at the heart of the matter, as it now began to be argued, was an insistence that the ministers of provincial government should be responsible directly to the people of Nova Scotia, through their elected House of Assembly, rather than to the Colonial Office in London. To Haliburton, as to Lord John Russell in England, such a conception of colonial government was completely at variance with the conception of a continued connection between colony and mother country. Haliburton was blind, we may choose to say, to the possibility of a paradoxical relation in which the way would be opened to self-realization and autonomy without separation from the British Crown. But it is perhaps fairer to say that he suffered (and this was certainly in a sense a limitation) simply from being more rigorously logical than most of his fellows. He saw severed ties and immediate independence as the only possible outcome of the movement for responsible government. With deep conviction he wished the ties preserved; and in independence for Nova Scotia he saw only the sad prospect of the loss of British influence on the North American continent, and the cultural and economic engulfment of the province, if not its actual annexation, by the dynamic American republic across the bay. It was at this point that Haliburton shortened sail as a Reformer. Alienated from both sides in the dispute, he quickly drifted out of politics. I apologize for these large amounts of potted history, but the facts need rehearsing if I am to make my point. That part of Haliburton which was the man of affairs in a political arena is pretty well lost to us because it does not connect with the present along the main stream of the country's political development. Haliburton's ship was washed up on the far shore. The main fleet sailed on up the middle of the channel-led first by the Joseph Howe and the Robert Bald11

OUR LIVING TRADITION

win, to be joined later by the Sir John A. Macdonald and the Sir Wilfrid Laurier, and, in our own times, by that discreetly rigged capital ship, the Mackenzie King. Have we then worked hard to discover nothing? I do not think so. The side of Haliburton I have described had a short life in the political arena; but it found other means of survival, as I shall point out later, in his role as a man of letters communicating ideas and values to us through the medium of his books. More important immediately, the main features of our political traditions are, I believe, thrown into relief and thus seen more clearly than might otherwise be the case by the very fact of Haliburton's negative relation to them. I at any rate learn something from seeing this Tory of the old school washed up on the righthand shore. And opposite him on the left bank, lo and behold, the firebrand leader of the abortive rebellion of 1837 in Upper Canada, William Lyon Mackenzie. Forlorn figures, scowling across the middle way. No heroes these. We are left with Haliburton the writer. In so far as Haliburton the writer was or tried to be a literary artist, his reputation has faced special obstacles which seem inseparable from the pursuits of creative writing in Canada. I have suggested that the colonial mentality has made us reluctant custodians of our past. But this statement is not uniformly true as applied to all aspects of our past. For instance, there is a widespread assumption, for which there is a sound basis and which has been ably built upon by our historians, that Edward Blake is an authentic part of our political tradition in a way that Gladstone is not. The corresponding assumption, however, that Duncan Campbell Scott is an authentic part of our literary tradition in a way that Matthew Arnold is not, has failed to win much currency except on high-days and holidays such as the one provided by the present lecture series. Such is the effect of passing from the realm of action, where national boundaries ensure significance, to the realm of literature, where national boundaries do not. It is clear at any rate that Haliburton has only just managed to retain 12

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

a hold on the edge of our consciousness as a writer of belleslettres. A Haliburton Club was founded in the Maritimes in 1884 as a by-product of the impulses of literary nationalism then abroad; but in the same year an article on Canadian literature published in The Week, a periodical which had a fair claim to be considered the cultural voice of the nation, made no mention of T. C. Haliburton. A uniform subscription edition of this writer-the edition for which C. W. Jefferys prepared his set of fine illustrations-was proposed and partly set up in 1915; but the venture died a natural or, if you prefer it, unnatural death. To date, no reprint of any Haliburton book in its entirety has, to the best of my knowledge, appeared for more than fifty years. Against this accounting, however, must be placed the bits and pieces of Haliburton enshrined in the "Makers of Canadian Literature" series early in the present century, and those later preserved in the more comprehensive selection made by R. P. Baker. By these means, and with the help of the recent publication of Jefferys' drawings by the Ryerson Press, I believe some awareness of a literary figure has survived. I have used the phrase "literary figure" in an ambiguous way. It can mean Haliburton, generally, as a writer. But what it does mean in fact, I think, is Sam Slick. In other words, it is this Yankee pedlar of clocks and moral and political notions to the Bluenoses who absorbs and accounts for almost the whole of the surviving public awareness of Haliburton's work. And there is a very good reason why this should be the case. For it is clear that it is only in the character of Mr. Slick that we make contact with what is sometimes called "pure" literature. The body of writing that lies outside Sam's orbit (and some of the writing, even, that lies within it) is only in a marginal sense creative. I do not wish to pursue this question. I have already used the terms "pure" and "creative" and would soon be involved in invidious distinctions between creative or imaginative and non-creative or unimaginative writing-and the very wording of the antithesis reveals the trap I wish to avoid. Nevertheless, I doubt whether any balanced estimate of Haliburton is possible 13

OUR LIVING TRADITION

which fails to emphasize that he made only limited use in his writing of the forms and techniques we are accustomed to associate with literature as an art. Amongst Haliburton's books, for instance, are no novels, no plays, no volumes of poetry. When he recounted stories from Nova Scotia's past, which he did quite frequently, he showed, in company with other Maritimers such as Pratt and Raddall, a fine talent for spinning a yarn. But he attempted and probably was capable of little in the way of securing those complex orderings of plot and character which we think of as proper to the art of fiction. Haliburton was a man with a message-with several messages, if we wish to give him the range which is his due; and so much was he the preacher that he was never able to stay long with indirect methods of instruction. It is true he thought of himself as employing extensively the principle of the sugar-coated pill. In a speech delivered soon after his first successes with The Clockmaker, for example, he said that in order to attain his objectives he had found it "expedient so to intermingle humour with the several topics . . . as to render subjects attractive that in themselves are generally considered as too deep and dry for general reading." And it is true also that he made good this claim, substantially, in his portrait of Sam Slick. But sometimes even in Sam, and certainly as a general rule elsewhere, the pill was very perfunctorily, very thinly coated. Haliburton's usual practice, when he was not writing straight political treatises, was simply to set up a kind of lumpy conversation, such as might pass under the name of dialogue, between a number of characters who might be supposed to reflect different points of view. The formula lay in the Spectator papers of Addison and Steele. Most of Haliburton's speakers, however, have such meagre life of their own that they come to represent, not disparate points of view, but merely different aspects of the author's personal preachment. Basically, were it not for Sam Slick, it would be fair to call Haliburton no more, and no less, than a capable and highly opinionated essayist. Sam, though, makes all the difference. And it is really a remarkable performance. Haliburton said early in his career 14

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

that when Sam ceased to speak, he, Haliburton, would cease to write. The promise, as you will have gathered, was by no means kept. But I can think of few cases in literature in which an author has won an international reputation solely by emptying himself, as it were, into the mould of a single character. Here is the fulfilment of Haliburton's best powers as a humorist and a satirist. Suppose we look for a moment, then, at this triumphant creative act. What makes Sammy run? I believe it is impossible to read these books without feeling the abundance of life that is in Sam Slick. There is, of course, a good deal of him quantitatively, since he plays a leading role in seven of Haliburton's published works; and in two others in which he does not appear in person he is nevertheless resurrected part-time, under different names, but in all the essentials of his homespun breed. Yet he could be much less on the scene and he would still dominate the imagination because of his sheer vitality. To put it another way, Sam is the embodiment of the quality of gusto-a quality which Hazlitt associated with the best products of the creative imagination, and which he described as "power or passion defining any object." Since Haliburton's clockmaker is a two-dimensional character, as flat as a gingerbread-man, the words "power" and "passion" perhaps imply deeper currents than are appropriate to him. But if we equate them, as I think we may, with the qualities of boldness and energy, we are not far off the mark. Like the gingerbread-man of the story-books, Sam possesses the qualities of dynamic life which enabled that cookie to hop out of the oven and run away across the fields. It is significant that Mr. Slick of Onion County, Connecticut, came at an early date to be identified with the world of real people. There is, for example, the story of how Haliburton, when he visited England in 1838, was asked to call, as a matter of some urgency, on Lord Abinger, then confined to bed. And when he made his call (so the story goes) the noble lord raised himself on one elbow from his sick-bed long enough to ask the author if it was not true-as he firmly believed-"that there is a veritable Sam Slick in the 15

OUR LIVING TRADITION

flesh now selling clocks to the Bluenoses." To which Haliburton replied no, it was not true. But Sam was not easily killed off. Many were convinced that if this Yankee pedlar did not himself walk the earth, somewhere his original, the real-life model of him, did. In a second-hand copy of The Clockmaker which I bought some months ago, I found a newspaper clipping pasted to the inside of the book's cover. Dated 1908, it bore the caption ORIGINAL 'SAM SLICK' DEAD; and the text read in part as follows: "A despatch from Bangor, Maine, to the Montreal 'Star' states: Jackson Young, known throughout New England as the original of 'Sam Slick, the Yankee Clockmaker,' written by Judge Thomas Chandler Haliburton, is dead here, aged 87 years . . . ." I doubt if this is a scholarly find (Mr. Young could only have been a pup of 14 years in 1835), and I am not much interested in whether it is or not. The point is that Sam Slick became a living legend in his own time. He was the kind of person one read about and was promptly sure that one knew, or that someone knew, or £or whom at any rate there existed somewhere an exact duplicate in the flesh. And this impression survives, on the whole, though the type is gone. High amongst Sam's assets as a lively leading man, we may note, is the fact that he is a delegate from the "grass-roots"-a term which has recently found much favour with politicians and newspaper men. Now, the mind of the "grass-roots," in its most aggressively democratic mood, is not in the least inhibited by silly notions about orthodoxy and propriety. Neither, £or that matter, in its most aggressively aristocratic mood, is the mind of the true-blue Tory; and it is here, obviously, that Haliburton and Sam Slick, otherwise unlikely partners, find common ground. Sam is therefore supercharged with ideas, and there is no stopping him. From his mouth comes a steady stream of saucy opinions; anecdote is heaped upon anecdote, tale upon tale; and the whole is lit with both lunatic and satirical laughter. Boldness and energy, moreover, are the qualities of the language itself-the colourful, explosive speech of the clockmaker tumbling out to form in sum one of the most zestful monologues ever written. Here is a joy with words and a turbu16

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

lence almost Elizabethan. And the words crystallize repeatedly into images-images of tremendous variety drawn from the life of the inns, the barnyards, the farm-kitchens, the seacoast villages of Nova Scotia. It is indeed a remarkable performance. I hope you will not be disappointed if I now by-pass, as adroitly as possible, the question raised by Artemus Ward's comment that Haliburton was "The Father of American Humour." The qualities of humour, it is generally agreed, like the qualities of tragedy, are universal. This is substantially true, though we may still wish to make ingenious distinctions between the humour of Punch and the humour of the New Yorker. English reviewers of Haliburton's books were sometimes divided in assigning national hallmarksone saying, for example, that in Mr. Slick was to be found a happy combination of English and Scottish traits of humour, and another that Sam's voice held the authentic notes of a bolder humour of the New World. This latter opinion may seem to have the better foundation. But if it has, I suspect that this is not because Sam is the embodiment of distinctive principles of humour, but simply because his character is set in an unmistakably American frame of reference. However great Haliburton's influence on the development of a so-called American strain of humour, short of or up to something we may care to think of as fatherhood, the fact is that by 1835, the year in which his clockmaker made his first bow to the public, the continent was already peopled with many characters, real and fictitious, possessing obvious kinship with Sam. From Susanna Moodie and others we learn of common conceptions of a type of Yankee itinerant who, like Mr. Slick, was a compound of democratic brashness and "calculatin'" shrewdness, who was cussed in argument and well stocked with folksy anecdotes and tall tales. Experts made distinctions between the cunning "downeaster" and the "ring-tailed roarer of the west." But more generally the strains merged in a variety of combinations as Davy Crockett, Seba Smith's Jack Downing, and the legendary Paul Bunyan jostled each other in the public mind. And with this kind of continental mythology there came to be 17

OUR LIVING TRADITION

identified, inevitably, thoughts of a distinctive brand of humour. The argument, however, cannot be pressed home. Tall tales, mad escapades, shrewd dealings, and plebeian wit are, after all, important ingredients of European as well as North American humour. In particular, boldness and energy, which are the qualities I have associated with Haliburton's creative powers as these are released humorously and satirically in Sam Slick, are by no means qualities to which North American writers have exclusive rights. The picture changes, on the other hand, when we place Haliburton, as I wish to do now, in a Canadian rather than a generally North American setting. What can be said about his relation, as a satirical humorist possessing the qualities of boldness and energy, to the literary traditions of Canada? Granted we have no exclusive rights, any more than the Americans do, to the qualities of boldness and energy in satirical humour. But do we, traditionally, exercise these rights to any marked degree at all? And if we do not, is it not then true that Haliburton is out of touch with a central tradition in our literature, just as surely as he is out of touch with a central tradition in our political development? I think it is both true, substantially, and very interesting. But first a reservation. In so far as I have spoken of boldness and energy simply as ingredients of a vital creative achievement, which is Sam Slick, there is no need to ask for other credentials on this page of Haliburton's passport for survival. Tradition lives, in one of its many aspects, in the memorable characters of literature-all of whom, I take it, possess the quality of gusto, or something like it, whether they promote the ends of satire and humour or not. And Sam is a memorable character. He may be a little lonely in his Canadian environment. The dust-jacket of a book I have received recently for reviewing, but which I have not yet read, assures me that it contains many memorable characters. I doubt it, for we have produced scarcely a handful of these in a hundred years. Still, Sam is there, and at least he invites company. This reservation made we can come at this question of tradition from a slightly different point of view. Observe this man Haliburton, appearing almost at the on18

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

set of our cultural evolution with his vein of fun and vigorous mockery. Unquestionably, he is something of an oddity. I at any rate have always thought it something of an oddity, cocking an ear back over long mirthless reaches of our literature, to hear, from the far side of Confederation, the spirited merrymaking and derisive jests of Sam Slick. Mature and dynamic work without conspicuous sequel, for Haliburton was to have no true followers for close to a hundred years. And it would seem that continuity was broken here for much the same reasons as those which I have associated with Haliburton's isolation from the main stream of our political traditions. The cutting attack through laughter was possible for Haliburton because he disliked many things intensely, because he was perfectly clear as to where and how his values differed from and were superior to the values commonly held in his society, and because there therefore existed between him and everything he opposed an area wide enough for the play of a vigorous dialectic. But as the extremes closed in upon the centre and the middle way found its justification socially and politically, the vantage point which he enjoyed far out on the wing was lost. Consequently, the possibilities for lively laughter with a bite to it, if not completely lost too, were at least greatly diminished for many years to come. It is true, of course, that a legitimate inheritance of Victorian seriousness in nineteenth-century Canada contributed to the eclipse. But no student of the literature written in this country during these years can fail to recognize the almost complete and therefore unique seriousness of this body of writing. Only towards the end of the century did the centrality of the country's values become itself sufficiently marked to provoke the separation of viewpoint that the satiric spirit requires. Not unexpectedly, however, since the amount of cleavage was small, the forms developed were mild-sophisticated irony and the humour that unites rather than divides the human family. The work of Sara Jeannette Duncan illustrates this modest dislocation. Nor does the picture change appreciably even with the arrival on the scene of Stephen Leacock. For Leacock operated from within the pale. Like Haliburton, he possessed re19

OUR LIVING TRADITION

markably vigorous powers of comic invention; but, unlike Haliburton, he had no position either right or left of centre such as might form the base for systematic and hearty ridicule. He was a great humorist, and that is high praise; but he was only in a limited sense a satirist. It was not, in fact, until the depression of the thirties brought again a wide separation in the country's social and political values that satirical humour of a bold sort reappeared; and this time the development-only temporary in any case, it would seemfound its main channel in poetry rather than in prose. In sum, then, we must conclude that Haliburton is not conspicuously related to the main stream of our literary traditions. He created Sam Slick, and Sam Slick survives handily as a character. But the special qualities he possessed as a satirical humorist were not passed down through any notable line of succession amongst Canadian writers. Nevertheless, definition is perhaps again helped by a recognition of opposites. It is something to see where continuity has been broken as well as where it has been maintained. I can now promise that in the time that remains to me I shall concentrate exclusively on aspects of Haliburton's thought which speak of connection with, rather than disseverance from, our traditions, as we understand these traditions today. I have said a great deal, following as honestly as I may the lead of my subject, about aspects of Haliburton's life and work which stand only in negative or inverse relation to various aspects of our cultural development; and I have argued that examination in this vein can be illuminating. But I have no wish to shirk the fact that living traditions are justly considered expressions, not of broken communication, but of communication sustained. Yet sustained, it may be, sometimes only in the special sense of being renewed. In what follows, therefore, I shall assume that in Haliburton's work, as in the work of other important men of our past, there may lie ideas to which we have become particularly and perhaps newly receptive. Such ideas may say little to generations out of tune with the premises on which they have been based; but if they have been spoken once with

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

authority they are always available for revival when the moment is opportune. Can anything be done at this point with Haliburton, the die-hard Tory-the man we left stranded some time ago on the far right shore? I think so, though I doubt that even that part of us, or of our society, that is happy to enter into conversation with Haliburton on this account can share completely his political and social premises. The line was pure from Burke once, whom Haliburton greatly admired; but in time it was to come close to extinction from being hedged about by the triumphs, general throughout the western world, of labour and democratic thought. Already, in his own time, Haliburton was a rare specimen in some respects. He professed not to understand the new word "Conservatism," seeing in its use in England merely a convenient label for a party which was made up (as he put it) of "Low-toned Tories and High Whigs," most of whom seemed willing to compromise fatally between monarchical and republican principles. Even more strange to him seemed the position of the so-called Tories of colonial politics-those from whom, along with the radicals, he had become alienated in the struggle for responsible government. The basic charge was the same, however: a bewildering and shocking abandonment of principle. "Good specimens," he wrote once, "if they could be procured, of full-grown whole-hog Tories and Radicals from that distant but turbulent colony would be a valuable addition to the British Museum, in its natural history department." But in the meantime, ironically, it was Haliburton himself who was being boxed in by history as a museum-piece, to await transhipment to posterity. C. W. Jefferys, opening the crate three-quarters of a century later, made notes for the edition he was to illustrate: "Haliburton," he wrote, "was full of fine old high Tory prejudices and Church and State opinions, but most of these are so antiquated that they are not likely to give any offence and will be more amusing than irritating." My point is that there is less likelihood of our being either amused or irritated today by Haliburton's Toryism than at almost any time since he wrote his books. In the decades bc21

OUR LIVING TRADITION

tween 1830 and 1860, Haliburton saw the coming of a new order, and he was fearful of the consequences. The spirit of reform was abroad, established institutions and beliefs were under attack, and there were stirrings amongst the great labouring masses of the people. The age of the common man was casting its shadow before it. The worst, so Haliburton thought, were full of passionate intensity, and the best lacked all conviction. He saw endangered the deeply rooted principles of the British constitution, and he was concerned about society's growing carelessness of the past. Fearing what he called the "tyranny of a majority," he opposed bitterly the levelling tendencies of his age. One recalls that fear of the "tyranny of a majority" had something to do with the appearance, in 1859, of Mill's essay On Liberty. And indeed Haliburton had many distinguished if sometimes unlikely companions in his stand against the corrosive effects of new conceptions of democracy: Tennyson in his Idylls of the King, Carlyle in Shooting Niagara: and After?, and Matthew Arnold in Culture and Anarchy, to name a few. Haliburton's position was, let us say, defensible on the basis of certain not unreasonable premises. The liberal-democratic mind, however, and particularly as this has emerged from the radical ferment of the nineteentwenties and thirties, has had difficulty discerning this central position in Haliburton, or in others; or, having discerned it, is unwilling to grant that it has much philosophical validity. V. L. 0. Chittick, for example, writing in the twenties the study to which I have referred earlier in this paper, is in the end baffled by his subject. Observing that Haliburton often supported, as he certainly did, "popular" measures designed to extend the benefits of education or improve the lot of the working-man, he can only fall back with increasing petulance on the cry of "inconsistency." And no more is he capable of letting us see even momentarily the picture of a man who fought a brave rear-guard action, however foolishly at odds with the course of history, against the forces of democratization. Do not mistake me: I have no wish to propagate a Tory myth or make a Tory hero. I have tonight no political be22

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

liefs. On the other hand, it is surely fair to say that there is open to us today a wider area of communication with Haliburton, the Tory of the old school, than was perhaps possible in Chittick's time. Political thought has shifted to the right in recent years, and with this shift has come a recrudescence of philosophical conservatism. Certainly, if I sense it correctly, the spirit of the times is prepared to question now, more than it has for many a long year, some of the assumptions which underlie the more rigoristic concepts of democratization. The field of education will furnish good examples. And all this, with other influences I have not time to describe, falls on the fertile soil of a Canadian temper of mind which is far more deeply conservative than radical. In sum, I do not think that the Canadian reader of today will say of Haliburton, as C. W. Jefferys said of him confidently forty years ago, that "he believed in pretty nearly everything that has been abolished or is now in process of demolition." Continuity with our past has here to a considerable extent been restored. I should like to see next what can be redeemed from Haliburton's uncompromising stand on the question of colonial ties. The point here is that Haliburton, though he played sometimes so deep in the field as to be almost out of the game, nevertheless faced the same wicket as the rest of the team. F. Blake Crofton, in an article which appeared in a centenary chaplet published by the Haliburton Club in 1897, expressed his great satisfaction at finding in Haliburton a timely reminder of our British heritage. "I could never ignore," he concluded, "his strong efforts to arouse a broader patriotism that might guard forever the imperial birthright whose grandeur he was great enough to understand." This "broader patriotism" we have always juggled successfully with other allegiances demanded by the long and difficult task of nation-building. It was, after all, the Great Chief himself, Sir John A. Macdonald, who established the symbol of an ambidextrous people by holding aloft in one hand his National Policy for Canada, and in the other a placard which read: "A British subject I was born, and a British subject I will die." The strength of sentiment in favour of Great Bri23

OUR LIVING TRADITION

tain and the Crown has undergone fluctuations in this country both before and since Macdonald's time, but the sentiment itself has never been seriously threatened. Or, if it has been threatened, it has always shown itself capable of remarkable powers of resurgence. There are indications that we are in the midst of such a period of resurgence today. Haliburton, then, as Crofton suspected, speaks the gospel of the country's orthodoxy in this respect. It is true, as we have seen, that he opposed the granting of responsible government to the colonies; but his whole argument on this question rested on his conviction that Nova Scotians should be first-class citizens in a homogeneous British alliance, and not, as he thought they too plainly were at this time, secondclass citizens in a colonial outpost. In other words, on this fundamental issue of the British connection it is the means Haliburton proposed rather than the ends he sought that separate him from the main stream of our political development. To the extent that he was an advocate of revitalized ties with Great Britain, the continuity of his ideas has been sustained. It would be possible to develop this theme further by noting those aspects of Haliburton's thought which connect with conceptions of Commonwealth relations currently much in vogue. Certainly when the issue of responsible government had been resolved and Haliburton had come to accept the new order with passable grace, he turned his attention increasingly to matters affecting the future of what he came to think of as a great community of Anglo-Saxon countries. He argued that amongst peoples united under the Crown there should be one vast trading area extending between the ports of London and Hong Kong. Over the length of his books, moreover, can be seen his preoccupation with the mechanics of linking together the parts of a world community which he believed was about to be born-his preoccupation, for example, with what he called "the responsibility of steam," with the building of canals and roads and bridges, with river and lake systems, with steamship and railway routes. Such interests have a certain timeliness for our own 24

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

day. But I waive pursuit of these matters in favour of a final point-a point which is related to this question of Commonwealth and world ties, but which focuses on Haliburton's role as pioneer citizen in what we recognize now as the Anglo-Saxon community of the North Atlantic. When I spoke earlier of Haliburton as a satirist, I described his position or point of view, which was that of a thorough-going Tory, and defined the qualities of his satirical humour, which were most strikingly those of boldness and energy. But of course a satirist engages targets, and it was for the purpose of engaging quite specific targets that Sam Slick was born. Soon after Haliburton's withdrawal from the House of Assembly in 1829 he began to think seriously, with the political issues of the time at the back of his mind, of using his pen to apply correctives to the attitudes of his fellow Nova Scotians. As a result, Mr. Slick made his appearance in the pages of the Novascotian in 1835. Haliburton's intention at this time was to urge the less specifically political side of his views, and for this Sam was a brilliant choice of weapon. The Bluenoses, Haliburton thought, lived in a province which was rich in natural advantages, but which nevertheless demanded from them a steady application to practical affairs and great industriousness if its potential was to be realized. Yet here were these same Bluenoses spending a large part of their time agitating for political reform and laying the ills of their depressed economic condition at anyone's door but their own. What better stick to beat them with than Sam? He was an outsider with a plausible knowledge of the country and an understandable interest in its welfare. At the same time, he had the credentials of a "grass-roots" representative of a people renowned for their industriousness and practicality-and of a people ready at the drop of the hat, as Sam was fond of pointing out, to buy Nova Scotia (or something worse) from King William. But as time went on the satiric attack in one sense broadened, in another sense narrowedbroadened to engage an increasing number of targets in the United States and Great Britain; narrowed to a more severe 25

OUR LIVING TRADITION

concentration on political themes. Over the length of this critical discourse, continued through many books, is plainly visible the formulation of a threefold appraisal. On the one hand, Haliburton looked critically at the United States and saw in that country many things he did not want for Nova Scotia. This aspect of his thinking sat uneasily with his original conception of Sam Slick's role as a propagandist for a better way of life amongst the Bluenoses; and in so far as Sam is pressed into service in this quarter his integrity as a character suffers. But by various means Haliburton made his points clear. He disliked the corruption and scramble for spoils which seemed to him characteristic of American public life. He saw in this a fatal abandonment of principle, and indeed in the whole conduct of religious and political affairs in the United States a lamentable insensitivity to tradition. He thought some aspects of the American constitution invited instability, particularly the theory of states' rights, and he had forebodings of the coming storm over slavery. He deplored American flag-waving and saw a kind of dangerous naivety in the boast that the United States was (as he often had Sam say) "the greatest nation on the face of the airth, and the most enlightened too." Above all, he was opposed to the wholesale levelling process which resulted in what he called the "mobocracy" of American life. Yet-and the reservation is importantHaliburton was by no means wholly unsympathetic to the American experiment. He did not want republicanism for Nova Scotia, any more than he wanted Nova Scotians to acquire the less desirable, to him, traits of the American national character. Certain other traits of this character he nevertheless admired tremendously-notably the industriousness, the energy, and the resourcefulness of the American people. Witness Mr. Slick, the indefatigable exponent of these virtues amongst the Bluenoses. The republican form of government, moreover, Haliburton saw as appropriate in its American setting, since it had a historical justification in the kind of society developed in the New England states in colonial times. Against outsiders who were glibly derogatory about American institutions and ways, he led many spirited 26

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

attacks-especially against the "eight-weekers," who spent most of their time in New York, and then returned to their countries to write witty accounts of lynching, sauciness, spitting, and speculation, and to propose easy solutions for what Haliburton rightly regarded as the very complex problem of abolition. And in his last published work, The Season Ticket, he preached strongly the benefits to be derived both by the British provinces (within a few years to become a nation) and by the United States from a policy of good-neighbourliness. "There is," he has a spokesman say in that book, "room for us both." On the other hand, Haliburton looked critically also at England. In the third series of The Clockmaker, Sam Slick reminds his companion, the squire, of the ridicule of the Yankees developed in the earlier books. "John Bull," he says, "has been larfin' at us until his sides heaves like a brokenwinded horse: clap a currycomb on him now, and see if his hide is thicker than ourn; for he is always a-sayin' that the Yankees are the most thin-skinned people in the world." Again there was a difficulty with satire, though in this case it was not the problem of keeping Sam in character (which was no problem at all) but the stronger check of Haliburton's fundamental sympathies that set the curb on ridicule. But again, by various means, Haliburton made his points clear. His main attack on the English, of course, was directed against what he considered to be a badly informed and unintelligent colonial policy-a policy which seemed to be made up chiefly of casual concessions better designed to weaken than to strengthen the loyalty of the North American provinces to the Crown. And he was deeply disturbed, as I have already suggested, by the way in which radicalism and dissent seemed to have debilitated the muscle and sinew of England. Moreover, a part of him conceded that some aspects of English life were plaguey dull. There was an artificiality about English society which contrasted unfavourably with the more natural order of the New World. He noted the tedious dinner parties and the routine-ridden weekends in the country, where snobbish young aristocrats lolled about with their silver spoons dangling from their mouths. 27

OUR LIVING TRADITION

He noted that civility had to be bought from boatman, porter, servant, and chambermaid. More generally, there were moments when he deplored the bull-headedness and the stiff-necked airs of Englishmen. Yet I need hardly remind you that for Haliburton, fundamentally, England represented the best of possible worlds-no nation being perfect. He admired the British constitution; he admired England's historic countryside. He admired her people's awareness of tradition and their sense of propriety, Chartists notwithstanding; he admired their honour roll of great men; he admired their courage and integrity. He could say truthfully, as he does in one of his books, "I love Old England." And finally, Haliburton brought these two appraisals to bear upon the making of a third, which was really the central concern of his life-an appraisal which, broadly interpreted, looked to the future destiny of the British provinces established on this northern half of the continent. Although he was for much of his life a transatlantic commuter and spent his last years in England, to Haliburton, first and last, Nova Scotia was his native land. This is the pivot around which his best writing moves. He was not a rabid patriot; his intellectual interests were too widely dispersed for that. Besides, it was early yet for the sentiment of patriotism to have much force. "To the Nova Scotian," Haliburton wrote some twenty years before Confederation, "the province is his native place, but North America is his country. The colony may become his home when the provinces become a nation. It will then have a name, the inhabitants will become a people, and the people have a country and a home." In the meantime, as he fully recognized, for him as for his fellow Nova Scotians, an important part of "home" lay beyond the boundaries of the province; and so far was he from regretting this that I think he may be supposed to have wished that such bifocalism might continue long after Nova Scotia ceased to be merely an isolated province. He was at any rate far from finding the outward look incompatible with the inward look. He loved the land of Nova Scotia and described it faithfully; faithfully too he recorded its history and the legends and stories of its people; and with these people he 28

THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON

felt such kinship as to spend the greater portion of his life trying to improve their lot and mend their ways. In his books, Haliburton referred frequently to the steady development amongst inhabitants of the New World, both American and British, of a sense of "home"-of a sense of belonging, not just to a place of residence, but to a country whose destinies they must inevitably share. I think the personal note is unmistakable in the story of the Shunammite woman which Haliburton assigns to the Rev. Mr. Hopewell, a character whom he employed consistently in his books to express his deepest convictions: How impressive, how beautiful, how dignified was the answer of the Shunammite woman to Elisha, who in his gratitude to her for her hospitality and kindness, made her a tender of his interest at court. "Wouldst thou," said he, "be spoken for to the king, or to the captain of the host?"-What an offer was that, to gratify her ambition or flatter her pridel-"I dwell," said she, "among mine own people."

Concluding that all history furnishes no parallel to this answer, the speaker adds words that might as justly have been spoken by Haliburton himself: "I too dwell 'among mine own people'; my affections are there, and there also is the sphere of my duties." Now the particular conclusions which Haliburton reached in the course of making his threefold appraisal of the United States, of England, and of his own province are based on premises which we may not care to accept. But it is not in any event the particular conclusions that are important. What does count is the process of controlled orientationthe process by means of which Haliburton gains the detachment necessary to move freely and in the best sense critically between the three points of our North Atlantic triangle; the process by means of which, at the same time, native traditions begin to take shape in relation to the two great spheres of influence, American and British, which are our historic points of reference. I do not believe I need to demonstrate that in the century which has passed since Haliburton's day this process has been repeated many, many times-though of course with many different positions taken up within the field of the three magnetic forces which regulate it. It is for 29

OUR LIVING TRADITION

this reason, if I may end on a topical note, that I can see in the present so-called crisis in Canadian-American relations no more than the temporary accentuation of a normal phase of our national process of orientation. And since such adjustments as have seemed necessary to retain our freedom of movement within the triangle have always been made quite efficiently, I see no cause for alarm now. Haliburton reminds us how deeply rooted in our national life this process of controlled orientation is. No pioneer in the usual sense of the term, he is a pioneer in this-in this role perhaps more surely than in any other, a part of our living tradition. I have only to add that all that I have now said is only one person's attempt to bring an important figure from our past into relation with the present along the main routes of the intervening years. Other interpretations are possible. Indeed, I do not think we have any right to speak of a living tradition if its components do not actively encourage a variety of syntheses. I have pictured Haliburton as having both negative and positive connections with certain, to me, important currents of our culture. But what is positive in my eyes may be less so or even negative in the eyes of others; and negative and positive are almost sure to make new and different patterns as we reach new vantage points in time. When all is said and done, what is truly important is to ensure, as I believe this lecture series does, that we take periodically a long look at the evidences of our past.

30

J.

M. S. CARELESS ON

GEORGE BROWN

Does George Brown belong in our living tradition? There is not much evidence on the Canadian public scene today of any feeling for this once towering political figure, the leader of the powerful Clear Grit Liberal party in the era of Confederation, the proprietor of the Toronto Globe, the most influential journal in British North America-the zealous partisan who used all his force and vigour to compel the reconstruction of the union of old Upper and Lower Canada, out of which Confederation and a vaster Canada were born. Present-day Liberals, with an apprehensive eye on the Province of Quebec, may hastily pass by this one-time party leader, whose strictures on Roman Catholics and French Canadians it is hardly politic to remember. They pay eloquent respect to the names of Laurier and King, sound, safe men on national unity, but they make small reference to the spectre of George Brown, lurking in their background as an embarrassing reminder of a rather different and discordant party past. The Conservatives, happily basking in the radiance of their own great father-symbol, can dismiss Brown as a dangerous but heavy-footed fury whose chief function was to be outfaced, outplayed, and fairly thoroughly outclassed by the cool-headed, far-seeing John A. Macdonald. As for members of the C. C. F., what have they in common with a laissez-faire liberal, a mid-Victorian press lord who strenuously resisted 31

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the early demands of organized labour and regarded socialism as something between insanity and original sin? And the remaining adherents of Social Credit-have they even heard of George Brown? The plain truth is that the things Brown largely represented no longer find much favour in Canadian opinion. He was above all the vehement partisan journalist. He made the Globe, between its establishment in 1844 and his death in 1880, so forceful an instrument that one harried opponent, Goldwin Smith, feelingly described its sway, in the Bystander of January 1883, as "a literary despotism which struck without mercy." Yet the Globe's polemical journalism was wholly characteristic of its age, and of what that age expected in its newspapers. Brown, who certainly did not begin the pattern of invective, did as his contemporaries did-but did it even better. The trouble is that people in our own day, fed on the bland diet of the modern press, which substitutes the artificial conflicts of the sports page and the fleeting sensation of the latest crime of violence for all-out political warfare, have little comprehension of what may not have been the finest era of the Canadian newspaper, but was surely its most potent. And we are disposed to accept the anguished cries of rivals worsted by Brown's paper at their face value, and solemnly endorse a Goldwin Smith's condemnation of Globe partisanship-himself one of the most dogmatic, slashing controversialists in Canada. Then too, Brown appeared as the champion of sectional and sectarian forces during his years in the parliament of United Canada between 1852 and 1867. He was the spokesman of the grievances of Upper Canadians in a union which, they charged, was ruled by Lower-Canadian, or rather French-Canadian, votes, while their own more populous section went under-represented. He was by far the most prominent leader in the heated Protestant reaction to alleged Roman Catholic domination over public policies, especially in regard to the enlargement of separate school rights in Upper Canada. In our own age, looking back on these angry ancient battles before Confederation, we may not be inclined to praise a combatant so closely identified 32

GEORGE BROWN

with the spirit of sectional division and religious discord, conscious as we must be that this country hangs always poised uneasily above deep differences in culture and religion. We may, in fact, be much readier to sympathize with the defenders of the old Canadian union, or even to agree with Brown's opponents in their description of him as a "Protestant bigot." We do not as readily inquire whether the existing union was worth sustaining, or had to be recast, whether strongly sectarian attitudes were unprovoked--or whether the roots of conflict lay at least as much in Brown's compatriots, and in the heated problems of his age. Furthermore, since Brown usually stood as a critic, in opposition, he does not have the same aura of achievement in our history as do figures on the ministerial side. His political role seems largely negative, one of denunciation, while his foes in Macdonald's Liberal-Conservative regime plough manfully forward with the positive work of financing the Grand Trunk Railway (over and over again), maintaining the union and the governing coalition, and presumably building onward towards a nation. His was the task of attacking extravagance and lack of principle in the coalition, ferreting out corruption, sustaining in the Globe the "voluble virtue" of the Clear Grits. And the fact is that, at least in historical retrospect, virtue is not half as much fun as vice. Compared to a Macdonald, whose very sins look charming at this distance, Brown may appear a bit of a prig and a bore. Certainly a later age, which is no longer aware of a sudden, monumental jump in the public debt of the pre-Confederation era, can afford to be tolerant about the costs of LiberalConservative coalition government, and to condone its heavy spending, some trading on political principle, and perhaps a dash of corruption. Were not its aims, after all, the high ones of maintaining union between the two Canadas and of developing the country? But George Brown would have termed this the pernicious doctrine of the ends justifying the means. Finally, one last reflection on lack of sympathy for Brown -there is a common view that he had few emotions beyond indignation and outrage, that he was humourless and stiff:

33

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not a man, but a set of dogmas, chief among them Rep. by Pop. This view is, in part, the result of Brown's long and close identification with his newspaper. In the popular eye, he was the Globe; and although this may be a tribute to the power of his newspaper, it also confuses an individual with a public institution. Actually the Globe had grown beyond a one-man editorial enterprise even before Brown entered Parliament, and thereafter he largely left the regular editorial writing in other hands. Without doubt the paper continued faithfully to express his ideas and policies. Yet it did so like a giant public address system, a mechanical reproduction which enormously amplifies the message but obscures the humanity of the speaker. George Brown came to his age, and on down to posterity, thoroughly bound up in the Globe. And while the stereotype presented in its pages shone with emphatic argument and glowed with strong conviction, it did not display much ordinary human depth or warmth. In a sense, Brown's reputation was both made and distorted by his journal. His reputation was not enhanced by a hard posthumous blow, a semi-official biography which, two years after his death, passed him into history in drab and lifeless guise. This was the production of his former lieutenant and heir in Liberal leadership, Alexander Mackenzie. Mackenzie's sober devotion to the great man, his own plodding style, and the fact that his work was virtually a party tract, all served to embalm Brown in a text as stirring as an obituary. It is true that a notably better biography was produced by John Lewis, one-time of the Globe, early in the twentieth century. But it still seemed to lack the vivid touch of life, and relied more on the printed words of Brown's newspaper than on Brown's private correspondence in depicting him. Mackenzie, his literary executor, had published a considerable selection of letters as an appendix to his own volume; still it was obviously abridged-and none too lively. The original sombre impression of Brown largely remained on the record. Yet what Alexander Mackenzie did, with the best inten34

GEORGE BROWN

tions, to bury the master far more than six feet deep becomes apparent now that Brown's original papers are at last available in the Public Archives of Canada. Mackenzie dressed up those he did publish, in places rewrote or expurgated passages he deemed unsuitable or too informal-and thus confirmed the general stiff appearance of George Brown. A look at the originals, however, reveals the fresh and animated way in which they were usually dashed off, and shows Mackenzie's deadening emendations written in pencil over crossed-out phrases and lines. For example, Governor-General Monck became "lengthy," not "long-winded," "they will think I have gone daft" was eliminated, and "I actually caught myself chuckling" was altered to "I was much pleased." These, then, are some of the agencies which have done George Brown to death no less than the bullet from the gun of George Bennett, the deranged ex-Globe employee who shot him in March of 1880. What can be said with a view to his resurrection-historical resurrection, that is? That he was engaging, vital, and anything but stiff, a man of widely varied interests, an affectionate father of a devoted family as well as a weighty Father of Confederation. That he had a profound influence on major developments in Canadian history, as a journalist, an entrepreneur, a party politician, and a statesman. By way of proof, we may look at each of these aspects in turn. Consider him first in his private life. Among Brown's strongest characteristics was his deep feeling for his family, shown in the quick contentment with which he retired into his own domestic world. Friends repeatedly remarked on the warmth of the Brown household, the cheerful kindliness of George Brown at home. This was as true when he lived with his parents, along with four sisters and his younger brother, Gordon, as when he married Anne Nelson, daughter of Thomas Nelson, the celebrated Scottish publisher, and had two daughters and a son of his own. He had, in fact, almost always known domestic happiness from the time he was born in Scotland, in 1818, into a substantial, close-knit, middle35

OUR LIVING TRADITION

class Edinburgh family. His father, Peter Brown, was a prominent wholesale merchant and Edinburgh official, and George's bond with him was always particularly strong. Peter Brown was widely read, had known the literary society of Scotland's "Modern Athens," and was an ardent Whig-Liberal in politics. He freely imparted his learning and his strong Liberal faith to his eager and devoted offspring. Soon, indeed, they seemed almost equals, keenly discussing Adam Smith's great teachings on free trade, or the advantages of the British parliamentary constitution, during rambles through the placid countryside surrounding Edinburgh. And when in the hard depression of 1837 severe financial losses drove the father to try his fortunes in America, it was only natural that his eighteen-year-old son George should go with him, in advance of the rest of the family, to make a new start in New York. It was George, buoyant, affectionate, and stoutly determined, who looked after his ailing and despondent father throughout a miserable Atlantic passage. He joined him on a venture into journalism in New York, where together they put out the British Chronicle, a little weekly for the local British emigrant community. And it was George again who brought Peter to another move in 1843-to Toronto, in Canada West, there to launch a larger journal, the Banner, as the organ of Free Kirk Presbyterian sympathizers in Canada. The Browns had always been firm Presbyterians, of decided evangelical leanings. They themselves wholly sympathized with the decision reached that same year by the evangelical Presbyterian party within the Church of Scotland to break from the established body and found the Free Church, separate from all damaging state connections. Hence they readily accepted an invitation from friends of the Free Kirk in Canada to come to that colony and fight the battle for the principle of the separation of church and state within the Canadian Presbyterian community. But in Canada, while assisting his father with political editorials for the Banner, George Brown soon found himself committed to the Liberal side in provincial politics. Thus the next year, 1844, at the age of 25, he established the Toronto Globe as a Reform 36

GEORGE BROWN

paper supporting the Baldwin-Lafontaine Liberals in their determined effort to achieve responsible government. Now the father rather assisted the son with his fast-advancing party paper, and within four years, after a Canadian Free Church had been successfully constructed, gave up the Banner completely for service on the Globe. Peter Brown retired from regular editorial work about 1850; but for years more came down to the Globe office on occasion. And until his father's death, in 1863, George Brown continued in the same association; consulting with the old man, showing his opinion every deference. What is more, he undertook to pay off Peter's large Scottish debts himself, even though his ambitious schemes to keep the Globe expanding drained away his cash. He married just a year before Peter's death, after a six months' stay in Scotland where he met Anne Nelson-he had been at Edinburgh High School with her brothers. Now began the most devoted relationship of all: he almost gloried in his marriage. To the end of his life he wrote his wife nearly every day whenever he was away from home on politics or business-"Goodbye, darling Anne-away from you is mere probation"-and his letters seemed to radiate the joy he found in their life together. The bright and sparkling Brown of these communications is a long way from tradition's dreary portrait. He had the same strong feelings for his children. Years afterwards, they remembered how they watched at the window of an evening until the tall figure in the fur cap came striding up the path, and the day began all over in games and laughter. This was the George Brown known to a wide circle of friends, besides his family. He had friends throughout Upper Canada, in the towns, villages, and farmhouses where he stayed on his countless trips across the western section. But most people knew him, of course, from the public platform, or, above all, from the Globe. And it is Brown the journalist who next should be considered. Moreover, it needs to be made plain that it was not just the force and the strong party doctrine of Globe editorials that made him the leading press figure in Canada. He won support for his journal in other 37

OUR LIVING TRADITION

ways besides: chiefly by making it a good and constantly improving newspaper. In the Globe's third year, 1846, Brown declared his policy on this very basis. Hitherto, he announced on September 8, newspapers had been read mainly by their party sympathizers; but, without in any way weakening the political character of his own, he intended to capture the "general readers" by offering them better service, more facilities, and fuller and more accurate news. He must have succeeded in his efforts, for by July 19, 1849, in notably Tory Toronto the Globe could announce a larger circulation than any of its Conservative rivals; and certainly this did not mean a corresponding increase in bona-fide Reformers. People-even Tories-read the Globe for the full, running record of events, whether its editorials enraptured or enraged them. John A. Macdonald and his circle watched the Globe; and the references in their correspondence seem to indicate that this was not merely for intelligence on enemy operations, but also for their own information-to learn as thoroughly as possible what indeed was going on. Brown found, and paid for, the best parliamentary reporters, the most able editorial writers. The roster of those who served on the Globe staff reads like a genealogy of journalism in Canada. He sought to get out the news as rapidly as possible. "The early bird gets the early worm," he once commented, "and so does the early newspaper." In this pursuit he contracted for the special use of the electric telegraph for news reports as soon as the wires reached Toronto in 1847. For early news, again, he kept reporters cooling their heels at dockside in New York during the Crimean War, in 1855, till a ship from Europe should bring the account of the long-expected fall of the great Russian fortress of Sebastopol. When it arrived, they were off in a splendid race from Ghent to Aix, by rail, steamboat, and horseback, to bring the story to the Globe office on King Street in Toronto. And when the plans for Confederation drafted at the Quebec Conference of 1864 were being unveiled at a public banquet in Toronto, Brown (one of the 38

GEORGE BROWN

chief speakers) had reports of the addresses in print on the streets outside while the banquet was still going on. He steadily improved the Globe's printing plant, bringing the rotary steam press into Canada in 1845, and repeatedly thereafter acquiring new, clearer fonts of type, and bigger, faster presses, and correspondingly producing larger, fuller issues. All this cost money; most of what he made he put back into the Globe to pay for constant improvements. He was, in fact, usually gambling on an increase in circulation; consequently, seldom had much cash on hand, and at times might be in quite considerable financial straits, despite the booming activity of the Globe. His press contemporaries generally followed the cautious rule of not expanding far beyond actual paid subscriptions. Brown, however, took a different view. He invested in improvements well ahead of subscriptions, always to increase circulation, confident that advertisers would flock to the most widely read journal and that rising advertising revenues would more than meet the costs of a forward policy. He early set this policy and steadily followed it, noting happily the ever mounting circulation figures and the pressure of advertisements on his columns. The Globe several times took to smaller type and larger pages to provide more room. It grew with particular speed in the booming early fifties, when merely between 1850 and 1853 it almost doubled its issue. By December 19, 1854, it could boldly claim to be the most widely circulated journal in the British Empire outside of The Times and two London weeklies, and in February and August, 1862, announced that in proportion to Canada's population its total sales were greater than those of any other newspaper in the world! No doubt claims of this sort were none too subject to exact proof. But clearly the Globe was big, big for Canada; and clearly an institution of its size in that relatively small colonial community had enormous and even overbearing influence. Furthermore, Brown had launched his newspaper along the path to the present-day dependence of the press on advertising revenue and perhaps on circulation-raising stunts. The final outcome 39

OUR LIVING TRADITION

may now not be a good one for the public value of the press, its real independence, or even its financial health. In Brown's day, however, none could say the strong-minded Globe felt any restraint on its pronouncements. Yet paradoxically, it was really not the oft-remarked partisanship of the Globe which was its most significant characteristic. Here Brown was simply continuing a pattern well established since at least the days of William Lyon Mackenzie. It was the Globe's development as a large-scale, mass-circulation medium that counted most of all. The fact is that Brown was actually less the political journalist of the old type, personally writing and editing his paper, than the new-style newspaper business man, the press entrepreneur-who, moreover, turned over the editor's chair to his brother Gordon after only the Globe's eighth year. And it was Gordon Brown who held it during the rest of George's life: that is, for nearly three decades. As managing editor, Gordon put out the paper day by day and directed the growing staff of reporters and correspondents. But George (who still did some writing) kept control of basic lines of policy and, in general, of the financial matters and business operations. George Brown, in short, needs to be regarded primarily as a substantial business man conducting a major publications enterprise, which besides the Globe and Weekly Globe included the agricultural journal, Canada Farmer, and a sizable job-printing establishment. His most devoted political support might lie largely in rural areas; he and his press might appeal particularly to an agrarian population-the bulk of Upper Canada, after all; and he might himself have an almost idealistic belief in the virtues of the self-reliant "yeoman" farmer. Nevertheless, his views were shaped on King Street, amid the ambitious, empire-building business community of Toronto; and his own romantic enthusiasm for the rural life was that of the city man, born and bred, who never tried it except as a well-financed gentleman farmer. As business man, he entered into one investment typical of his era, buying up wild lands in the southwestern county of Kent, during the railway-building boom of the fifties, 40

GEORGE BROWN

in the expectation that the new Great Western Railway would traverse and open up his large block of property. It did so; and Brown contracted to supply the railway with cordwood for its locomotives in return for the placing of a way-station, Bothwell, on his estate. He hired a hundred lumbermen and more to cut the wood and clear his land for settlement. He set up a cabinet factory to use the better quality of timber, a saw mill, and a grist mill; and busily sold off town lots and farms. By the later 1850's, Bothwell was a humming village, its economy dependent on George Brown and the G.W.R. In fact, for a time the "Laird of Bothwell's" I.O.U.'s paid his working force and served as currency in the community. The depression after 1857, however, brought serious difficulties to Bothwell and to Brown's overstrained finances. Still, he survived-and then, in the early sixties Bothwell was swept into Canada's first big oil boom. Brown sold out his holdings at the peak of the boom. When he retired from the government that had been formed to carry Confederation, late in 1865, it was popularly reported that he was leaving politics to live on his wealth. He did retire from Parliament two years later, and within a few years lost much interest even in active journalism. For he became engaged in a large stock-breeding venture at his new estate, Bow Park, near Brantford, into which he put his Bothwell profits and increasingly his time. Bow Park sought to introduce pedigreed cattle-raising on a large scale into Canada. It began as a hobby, but soon was a demanding business. It became a joint-stock company, largely floated with Nelson publishing money from Scotland, and sent George Brown repeatedly to Britain, in the 1870's, to buy the finest breeding stock and raise more funds. In the end Bow Park did not succeed. A combination of bad luck, extravagant planning, and-ironically-George Brown's lack of farming skill brought it to the brink of failure by his death. Yet in the mid-seventies Bow Park Farm was one of the leading stock-breeding enterprises on the continent, and a recognized attraction on the grand tour of North America for distinguished British visitors. 41

OUR LIVING TRADITION

As well as newspaper magnate, land speculator, stockbreeder, mill and factory owner, George Brown was a leading member of the Toronto group that organized the Bank of Commerce in 1867. He was besides a director or a major shareholder in Toronto companies that ranged from insurance to linseed oil manufacture, and he even briefly held world rights (outside North America) to the telephone invented by the son of Bow Park neighbours, young Alexander Graham Bell. Further still, he was an important pioneer of Canadian penal reform, in his capacity of government commissioner and inspector of the provincial penitentiary. But it is possible here only to indicate these multifarious interests, and time to pass on to his much better known role as a party politician. His chief work in this respect lay in the reconstitution of the Upper Canadian Reform party during the 1850's, when he organized a powerful sectional front to press the grievances of Upper Canada within the old Canadian union. He shaped it by uniting Clear Grit radicalism, a potent force in what was then the farming west, with leadership centred in the rising western metropolis of Toronto. Clear Grit farmers of Upper Canada were hot against the ruling Liberal-Conservative coalition, which seemed to them to embody the sinister twin domination of Montreal finance and French Catholic power over the province. Toronto was as eager to contest with Montreal for commercial and financial mastery of the western section of the union. And George Brown, the devoted admirer of the sturdy yeoman, the owner of the most influential paper in the west-the Toronto business man, the urban Liberal-was well qualified to mould and guide this formidable sectional alliance. To a large extent he did so by bringing the Clear Grits to accept his own political outlook. At the start of the fifties, indeed, he had fought violently with the emerging Clear Grit radical movement, chiefly because it sought to remodel Canadian political institutions along the lines of American elective government, while he was a firm believer in the superiority of the British cabinet and parliamentary system, as realized in Canada since the establishment of responsible 42

GEORGE BROWN

government. But the collapse of the old Baldwin-Lafontaine Reform party and the formation of the broad-based LiberalConservative coalition in 1854 had left Brown and the Grits almost alone in opposition in Upper Canada. They came together in denouncing this unprincipled coalition of High Tories and moderate Reformers, of Macdonald's Orange Conservatives and Cartier's staunchly Catholic French Bleus. And they grew together, as previous differences were put by in the common attack. Yet it was Brown's tireless, zealous oratory on the public platform and the Globe's persuasive stream of editorials which fixed policies for the alliance such as representation by population and the acquisition of the vast empty Hudson's Bay Company's territories beyond the Great Lakes. Clear Grit demands for thorough-going democracy and American elective institutions were dropped. In fact, Grittism under Brown's strong-minded direction turned increasingly from agrarian radicalism to an Upper Canadian version of mid-Victorian British Liberalism. Brown himself was no agrarian; and in his political thinking could hardly be called radical. He opposed fundamental change in government. He distrusted full-fledged democracy on the American plan of one man, one vote, and preferred to see qualifications maintained whereby political rights fell to those who had some stake in the community. At any rate, during his period of control the Grits changed from an idealistic farmers' movement to a much more empirical political party but little concerned with basic reform. This may not seem to fit with the record of Brown's fierce onslaughts on the very constitution of the old Canadian union, demanding that the equal division of seats in Parliament between the two sections be done away with, and that representation by population be adopted instead. Undoubtedly, French-Canadian journals wrote of "the savage doctrines of Brownite radicalism" (see Le Canadien, January 27, 1858), as they contemplated his equally fiery onslaughts on Roman Catholic power in politics. Yet here George Brown was simply voicing the sectional and sectarian protests of Upper Canadians against what they termed "French 43

OUR LIVING TRADITION

Catholic domination." To insist that representation in the union be altered, or to condemn Roman Catholic influence on government might be disruptive or unjustified-but it was hardly revolutionary. These positions did not even originate with Brown. French Canadians had talked of representation by population in days when Lower Canada itself had held the greater number of inhabitants. Tories had been loudly anti-French and anti-Catholic in times before they joined the Liberal-Conservative coalition. Besides, Clear Grits had cried out against French Catholic power and advocated representation by population before Brown took up these themes and made them so characteristically his own. In sum, sectional and sectarian vehemence derived essentially from the unsatisfactory nature of the union and the general rise of religious issues during the 1850's, not inherently from Brown. That decade saw French Canadians holding a balance of power in politics, while Upper Canada's population steadily increased beyond Lower Canada's but its parliamentary membership did not. At the same time, the fifties witnessed legislation to enlarge Catholic separate school rights in Upper Canada-acts passed against the will of the Protestant majority of that section by virtue of the combined strength of the western Catholic minority and the eastern Catholic majority. The legislation might have been just and necessary; yet its passage virtually amounted to the coercion of Upper Canada. Small wonder, then, the fervour of the western Protestant outcry. It was not George Brown's doing, even though he most strongly associated it with his reconstructed Clear Grit party. Furthermore, his opposition to Roman Catholic "threats" was not the simple anti-Papery of the Orange Order. It went back to his belief in the total separation of church and state, the epitome of his Free Church Presbyterianism. Churches should keep free of state entanglements, and neither accept public grants nor seek special legislation to support their own denominational schools. Still further, the principle of the separation of church and state was an integral part of Brown's political Liberalism. He held, as his father before 44

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him, that true individual liberty required that religious authority should not interfere with political expression, and that churches should have no link with government or public funds, so that sectarian quarrels and religious differences need not enter into politics. No doubt these tenets actually led him to sectarian strife; but he was no less arguing from principle than his Roman Catholic foes who repudiated the concept of a "godless" state and of citizenship unsanctified by religious ties. In any case, the Liberal party which George Brown moulded found a more lasting character in mid-Victorian Liberalism than in Protestant sectarianism. With Confederation the old religious quarrels subsided, and, though new ones might reappear, George Brown himself made peace with the Roman Catholics. Many Catholics in Ontario returned to Liberal allegiance, and especially to support the provincial party of Oliver Mowat, which in many respects was the nearest heir of Brown's Upper Canada Reform group. Certainly a strong sectional bias remained in Mowat Liberalism, as it assumed the role of defending Ontario's rights against the central power in the new federal union. Yet the federal Liberal party led after Confederation by Alexander Mackenzie also showed evidence of Brown's bequests. It too was built about the hard rock of Ontario Grittism. Like Brown, it was Victorian Liberal and Cobdenite free trade in outlook, although empirically rather than dogmatically so. As well it kept alive the Grits' claim to be the protectors of the ordinary Canadian, the primary producer, against the big interests-even though no really strong agrarian democratic upsurge would appear again until the early twentieth century, when the western plains were settled; and then it grew up outside the folds of official Liberalism. One final point seems obvious: Brown had done the job of taming radical tendencies within Liberal ranks for a long time to come. This brings us to the last consideration, George Brown as a statesman. The distinction between this term and politician is both uncertain and invidious. Perhaps one should merely agree with Bob Edwards that a statesman is a dead 45

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politician-and the country needs more of them. Nevertheless, beyond Brown's activities primarily as a party politician, two things stand out and deserve attention: his feeling for Canadian unity and national development, and his role in the achievement of Confederation. The two, of course, are closely interlinked. He represented Upper Canada sectionalism, but there was a chord of nationalism in him as well. It was expressed early in his career, when on January 2, 1847, he affirmed in the Globe, "A Canadian Nationality which would draw off these opposing interests and unite the whole country in one bond of brotherhood would make Canada a different world." He did not feel any need to break the bond with Britain: self-government on the British model, within the British Empire, seemed a wholly satisfactory basis for nationhood. Yet, as Confederation approached, he could well imagine a future Canada offering to Britain "the friendship of a powerful and independent ally in compensation for the long years of protection she extended over us as colonists" (Globe, August 2, 1864). His sentiments of nationalism, however, were bound up chiefly with questions of Canadian union and expansion in North America, more immediate to his time than matters of external relations. Brown's feeling for union was apparent even during the sectional battles in the old province of Canada. It is easy to recognize the war he waged against the Canadian union as it then stood. What is less evident is the struggle that he waged against the complete destruction of that union. Yet there were strong elements among the forces that he led which, in angry frustration, frequently pressed for the dissolution of the bond between the two Canadas as the quickest and simplest remedy for Upper Canada's wrongs. Indeed, in the 1850's Brown brought Reformers to accept representation by population as an alternative to the impatient demand for dissolution, arguing that it would ensure justice for Upper Canada without abandoning the benefits of the existing ties with Lower Canada. It would, he held, create a true union, by wiping out the dividing line of equal representation between the two sections. And he sometimes had 46

GEORGE BROWN

to fight for Rep. by Pop. on two fronts-not only against those who accused him of seeking to destroy the union, but also against Grits on the back-benches and in the country, who would have been perfectly willing to do so. He and the Globe repeatedly strove to convince the dissolutionist element of the merits of the union of the Canadas. To an extent, their own convictions might be attributed to the greater awareness of the economic benefits of union to be found in the Toronto business community than among the Grit following in the countryside. Assuredly they stressed the commercial advantages of the unity of the St. Lawrence, that would inevitably be lost to two separate provinces. Yet there was more to it than that. Brown and the Globe also disclosed decided national aspirations. Dissolution would be a step back into a parochial past, they asserted. A broad-based Canadian union had been founded, the basis for a nation. It must be maintained. The framework of union could, and would, extend until it reached from Atlantic to Pacific, while sectional issues within Canada were certain to be overcome. Who would throw half a continent away because of temporary difficulties? This was Brown's underlying belief, this more than a decade before Confederation. It was much the same with another of his main causes: the demand that the Hudson's Bay territory beyond the Great Lakes be incorporated in Canada. At the outset, his arguments for acquiring the Northwest, as expressed in the Globe as early as 1850, were largely economic, and tied up with promoting Toronto's business interests. The discussion did not turn on western settlement, or on new lands for agriculture, so much as on the western traffic which the fast-rising city might hope to gain and control if the Northwest were removed from the rule of the Hudson's Bay Company. Brown's brother, Gordon, even shared prominently in ventures during the fifties to open effective communications between Toronto and the Red River. It was possible, however, for Toronto business men and Clear Grit farmers to agree fully on the need to annex the west: the former for reasons of trade, the latter to obtain a vast new agricultural frontier. Hence, from 1857 on, the acquisition of the Northwest be47

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came a principal plank of the Clear Grit Liberal party as directed by George Brown. Yet, as well as emphasizing the wealth of trade and crops to be won by western expansion, Brown and the Globe again couched their appeal in terms of national aspirations. "A great empire is offered to our ambition," urged the journal on March 6, 1862; and again, on January 22, 1863: "If Canada acquires this territory it will rise in a few years from the position of a small and weak province to be the greatest colony any country has ever possessed-able to take its place among the empires of the earth." It appealed to every interest, to both Canadian cultures, to share in the great achievement; exhorting French Canadians to recall their own exploits of fur-trade days in opening up the west. Once more, some years before Confederation, Brown was reaching for some satisfactory basis of agreement among Canadians that would clear the way for effective national expansion. He displayed that aim quite plainly in the celebrated Reform Convention of November 1859, when he headed off a determined drive from Grit back-benchers to make dissolution the party policy, by advocating federation in its stead. A federal union of the two Canadas would shift matters of deep sectional disagreement to local governments, but maintain the union and the common interests of Canadians through a central, joint authority. It would enable representation by population to be established in the central sphere, and thus give Upper Canadians their due weight there, while safeguarding the special interests of the French-Canadian minority under their own local regime. Further than that, the federal principle would allow the west, and ultimately the Pacific and Atlantic provinces, to be readily brought into union, since sectional rights could be protected even as a new national structure was extended across the continent. Brown captured the Convention with an ardent, glowing vision of nationality-"the day when these northern countries shall stand out among the nations of the world as one great confederation." From that time on, whatever the temporary setbacks, his course pointed logically towards the Confederation of 1867. 48

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Federation was in the air in any case, by the early 1860's, whether for the Canadas initially, as George Brown would have it, or for all the British North American colonies, as A. T. Galt had brought the Cartier-Macdonald Government to propose. After a cool reception at the Colonial Office, however, the Liberal-Conservatives had left their proposal in abeyance. The sectional strife in the Province of Canada continued. But Brown, the headlong, aggressive partisan, now began to tread more quietly and carefully in approaching the bristling problem of remaking the union. The change might be related to the serious illness that in 1861 took him out of politics for some time, or to the undoubted mellowing influence of his marriage in 1862. Yet it was surely forecast in his endorsing the federal principle at the Convention of 1859; and that, in turn, perhaps went back to his disastrously short ministry of the year before, the Brown-Dorion Government, which had lasted but two days. The Brown-Dorion failure was not, in fact, the unmitigated disaster that his enemies made out. It gave him the valuable experience of concluding an agreement with French-Canadian and Roman Catholic interests to govern in partnership. It demonstrated that he could reach an understanding with Lower Canadian leaders, and form a ministry dedicated to solving the problem of the union by establishing Rep. by Pop. together with constitutional safeguards for French Canada. And though this government was never given a chance by Assembly or Governor-General to show what it might do, the compromise it adopted was the antecedent of Brown's acceptance of a federal concept, and a significant step that led him to the constructive statesmanship of Confederation. At any rate, by 1864, as the existing union was plainly grinding into deadlock-as Liberal Grits in Upper Canada, Conservative Bleus in Lower, counterbalanced one another and rendered governments powerless-Brown saw in the mounting crisis the opportunity to settle the constitutional problem once and for all. He moved soberly, moderately, to secure the appointment of a select committee to inquire into remedies for the difficulties of the union. Under his 49

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chairmanship it brought together leading men from both sides of the House, of every shade of opinion. And it reported in favour of a federal union, either of the two Canadas or of all British North America. The plan was there, endorsed on either side, when, on the very day the report was tabled, a last shaky ministry under John A. Macdonald collapsed. Immediately Brown made known that he would support a new government pledged to a constitutional settlement. Macdonald and Cartier responded to the overture. The crisis itself had been utilized to bring solution. A new coalition cabinet, including Brown, now embraced the proposal for federal union: the larger scheme was to be attempted first, the smaller if that failed. Either way Brown had succeeded. Through the party he had built, he had forced an ill-conceived union to a standstill, had opened the way to reconstruction and won Rep. by Pop. for Upper Canada (within federation) while still maintaining the connection with Lower Canada. His sectionalism had worked to a positive national end. It was the high-point of his career. Certainly Brown took a prominent part in the attainment of Confederation thereafter: in the work of Charlottetown and Quebec Conferences; in London late in 1864, discussing the question of the acquisition of the Northwest with the Imperial authorities; in the debate on the Quebec Resolutions in the Canadian House in early 1865, when he made one of the finest of all his speeches; and always in his firm support of the Confederation project, both in person and through the Globe. He left the government late in 1865, before Confederation had been realized, but he continued to support the great design. Ostensibly he resigned over a disagreement concerning negotiations for the renewal of reciprocity with the United States. He wanted reciprocity, but not at any price, and thought the government meant to play its hand too weakly. But no doubt as well he felt the strain of working with John A. Macdonald, his prime rival, especially since Macdonald was increasingly becoming the real leader of the Confederation coalition. One may admit Macdonald's rise to leadership was well deserved. A late convert to federal union, he had now almost 50

GEORGE BROWN

made the scheme his own, fully exercising his diplomacy in the negotiations with Britain and the other colonies, readily displaying that amiable skill in handling individuals which George Brown (who could handle them in masses) very largely lacked. Brown was human, and he was sternly proud besides. He could not but resent Macdonald's rise to head a movement which he himself had done so much to make possible, and to which he and Cartier had brought the main blocks of parliamentary supporters in Canada when Macdonald had headed a much weaker minority of Englishspeaking Conservatives. In any event, Brown had now virtually completed his parliamentary career, achieving in Confederation the settlement of issues he had struggled with for fifteen years. When the new Dominion was finally erected in 1867, he ran again for Parliament in the first federal elections, and was defeated in a badly chosen constituency. He could easily have had another. He was offered several, then and later. But he refused, and not because of bitterness. He had long talked of retiring from active politics when the problems of the Canadian union had been dealt with. He was not really a career-politician but a newspaperman who far preferred the work of the Globe office. (Among the Brown Papers are proof sheets of an article on his life and on one of these is a comment in his own handwriting which declares the restraints of official life to be "a bore and a heavy penalty.") He had seen a cause to be fought through; had fought it single-mindedly. Now, just as single-mindedly, he turned away from parliamentary life. He still exercised influence in the Liberal party behind the scenes; he made brief appearances in the Senate after Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie appointed him to that body in 1873; and he conducted negotiations for the abortive Reciprocity Treaty of 1874 in Washington. But to all significant extent Brown's political career had closed in 1867, and not from lack of opportunity to pursue it further. He had none of Macdonald's love of the game: soaring enthusiasm in an election campaign or a House debate, yes -but none of the sheer political diligence that lay beneath Macdonald's easy, off-hand manner. Brown could never un/Jl

OUR LIVING TRADITION

derstand him, a rival who seemed all superficial geniality and cold expediency, who mingled Orange with Bleu with apparent unconcern for principle. He could far better appreciate Cartier, an implacable enemy for years, yet one who had stood for something Brown could readily understandthe opposite sectionalism to his own, that of French Catholic Lower Canada. He had got on well with Cartier in the Confederation coalition. The two had each other's measure; they parted on the best of terms. Here strong and characteristic evidence comes from Brown himself. It may be found in a letter he wrote to Cartier on February I 7, 1868, when the great battles were over-a letter now among the Chapais Papers in the Provincial Archives of Quebec. And incidentally, it reveals a good deal of the blunt, definite opinions, the outspoken mind, and the underlying direct and likable nature of this man Brown: I have had a longing to write you from a good while back-for notwithstanding all our old battles, there was nothing in our intercourse as Colleagues for 18 months that left a painful remembrance on my mind towards you personally but much that commanded my respect 8c esteem. I have not written a political letter to any one in Nova Scotia or New Brunswick since I left the administration in December 1865-because I would not say a word that might even indirectly affect the success of our Union project. I have not written a line to a political friend anywhere on politics, since the general election-because I think it hardly right to use personal influence where there is no personal responsibility. If then, I am now found writing to you on political matters--to you who were "mine ancient enemy"-it is because there is one point on which an expression of opinion is specially due from me to you, 8c two or three points, which are of such high national interest & so removed from all personal considerations, that even I may address EVEN you upon them. Well, then,-I want, first to express to you my sincere regret that the highest rewards offered by the Crown for the services rendered in carrying Confederation, was not awarded to you as well as to Mr. John A. Macdonald. Of course, I can see how difficult it would have been for the Colonial Minister to go beyond the President of the Conference-unless indeed, Mr. Macdonald had relieved him from the embarrassment by gratefully declining the honour while you, who so much more deserved it were passed by. And I don't believe there are two opinions among those who know the facts, as to what Mr. Macdonald's course should have been. No man, perhaps, is in so good a position as myself to say who contributed most towards the success of the great constitutional changes that have just been accomplished-and I have always said &

52

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am ready to maintain, that without your aid, they could not have been accomplished. Lower Canada was the difficulty in the way-and you were the only public man in Lower Canada, who when the crisis arrived had the pluck & the influence to take the Bull by the horns. You ran the risk of political death by the bold course you took, Mr. Macdonald ran no risk whatever. If ever subject earned the highest reward of his Sovereign, compatible with his position, you have done so. I say nothing of myself in this matter. Of course I believe that my fifteen years contest for Constitutional reform, and my bold action in 1864 won the battle-and that you & Macdonald were made to "move on" in spite of yourselves to a certain extent-and that I might therefore have entered claims to honours very different from either of you. But the truth is I have not the slightest leaning in that direction: I live very much by the consciousness of having done the work-but I don't care one straw for a ribbon or a title, as a Canadian-which I always expect & wish to be. . . . . . . But now-while keenly alive to all that affects the well-being of the Country which I owe everything, & anxiously desirous of the success of Confederation-and while ever ready to give a yeoman's lift at any moment to my old friends of the Reform party-I am not conscious of a single personal aspiration in connection with public affairs. I am not only out of Parliamentary life-but gradually & rapidly getting out of public life-& have not the smallest intension or desire ever to enter it again. I was not in the least chagrined by my defeat in South Ontario. I ran against my desire at the earnest intreaty of my political friendsI fought the battle with all my might when I went into it-I was honourably relieved from servitude by what occurred-and I never knew what it was to enjoy life until relieved by that event of the political burden I had borne for near twenty years. I am no longer the slave of the lamps-my hours are my own. I have a happy home-always happy -a prosperous business that occupies my thoughts sufficiently-a beautiful property that gives me relaxation & where I hope to welcome you sometime-& the heart I trust to thank God for all his blessings & to remember that they are given for good of others as well as of myself. Can you wonder that I thoroughly en joy my new life-that there is no happier man in her Majesty's dominions-& that I heartily sympathize with those of my old friends who are still suffering the penalties of public life? [He asked Cartier to come and visit him]: Now that all our electoral, educational & ecclesiastical bickerings are at an end, would not such a visit be a pleasant thing-& not without beneficial effect? No one would be happier to see it than my good wife.

Perhaps, after all, there is a lesson at the end with which Brown might enrich the Canadian tradition. In his day in the political life of Canada he faced the main body of the 53

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French Canadians as a strong sectional antagonist. He contended with the policies they represented, and they replied in kind. Yet he resisted the simple way out, the way of dissolution of the union. He believed it was possible to fight through to an agreement between Canadians, and that this was not only the most honourable but the most enduring way to settle differences between them-assuredly not to dodge about forever, pasting on paper-thin compromises under which the rifts grew deeper. This is not to suggest that such a heroic (or foolhardy) policy may generally be recommended to the country. But it does seem salutary to point to the possibility of some other course than that of using platitudes on national unity as political Scotch tape for the cracks in our Canadian psyche. It might be salutary, that is, to pay more attention to the career and viewpoint of George Brown, undoubted sectionalist, but national architect as well.

54

J.

S. TASSIE ON

PHILIPPE, AUBERT DE GASPE

Professor McDougall opened this year's series of lectures on "Our Living Tradition" with an enlightening account of the life, work, and place of Thomas Chandler Haliburton in the early years of Canadian thought. This lecture will be devoted to presenting something of the corresponding period in French Canada in the contribution of Philippe Aubert de Gaspe, the author of a classic in French-Canadian literature, Les Anciens Canadiens, and a symbolic figure representing the fine ideals of an age that is now long past. I should like you to keep in mind the concept of De Gaspe as "the grand old man of French-Canadian letters" (his great work was published in 1863 when he was 77) with all that the expression implies of nobility, idealism, intimacy, and nostalgia. To assure ourselves of a balanced appreciation of De Gaspe's contribution to Canadian life and letters, it will be necessary to look briefly at the historical scene and the literary climate of his age, and then come to a discussion of his family life and his personal accomplishments. I

In the early seventeenth century four enterpnsmg European nations, Britain, France, Holland, and Spain, were busy establishing empires in America. It would seem that 55

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two sometimes conflicting forces were at work in these ventures, the urge to explore and trade and the need to govern. For France and Spain, however, a third important force is involved from the beginning, the force of religion. The unity of purpose characteristic of the Catholic tradition imposed on the conqueror the obligation of spreading the "one, true religion," an obligation that is not so clear in the Protestant endeavours. Yet in New France the Church seems in general to have run a poor third in the race for power with commercial interests and administrative bodies. When Britain seized the colony in 1760, the administration passed abruptly yet naturally into English hands where it remained for a considerable length of time. The French commercial empire was broken by the conquest and gradually commerce fell into the hands of the English. Freedom of religion had been guaranteed by the new masters and was respected on the understanding that the Catholic hierarchy would assure loyalty to the legitimate, that is, British administration. Here, now, was a French colony in many ways bereft of its natural supports, its historical continuity broken, partially deprived of the life-blood of commerce, and exposed to the vagaries of a foreign master. One sure source of solace, one obvious fountainhead of unity was at hand in religion. It is not surprising, then, that the post-conquest period is regarded by some religious historians as one of the most satisfying periods in the history of French Canada. One senses in retrospect a unity of purpose and a co-operative spirit between Church and people that has not been matched before or since. Thus it is evident why French Canada distinguishes itself even today as one of the most faithful sons of the Church. Under the French regime, the seigniorial system had been established in Canada as an administrative measure, perhaps partly to balance the power of trading interests, and certainly as a means of settling the vast expanses of unoccupied land. A seigneur was in some respects little more than a royal land agent looking and hoping for settlers without whom his fief could hardly be maintained. The seigniorial system was 56

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maintained for almost a hundred years after the conquest. As most of the seigniorial families had remained in Canada, they, with the Church, formed the visible link with the past, the source of consolation in the present, and the hope for the future. A loyalty therefore developed between the seigneur and the habitant, a sense of belonging to each other and to the soil of Canada, and this was the basis of a patriarchal system that had hardly been so fervently supported in the past. Such, in any case, is the point of view from which De Gaspe wrote. It is easy to see that the seigneur might continue to be regarded as the symbol of the French tradition in the social order, as the Church was in the realm of religion, and it is easy to see how these two institutions worked together to maintain their common ideal. The commercial and administrative spheres of activity being blocked, the Canadien, with limited potential, had little choice but to attach himself to the soil as a valid and sure way of life. The growth of a homogeneous agrarian society was the result; it was a solution almost too thoroughly encouraged by formalization into a mystique raciale in which race, religion, soil, and peasant became almost coincidental terms. "Almost too thoroughly," I say, because such a concept of society, essentially static in nature, gives pre-eminence above all to the virtue of submissiveness which hardly seems compatible with the Gallic nature. The French have been leaders, not followers, in European civilization ever since the early Middle Ages and French Canada certainly is conscious of that proud tradition. French Canadians proved in 1837, moreover, along with their compatriots of Upper Canada, that they also breathed the free air of America and would no longer submit to the oligarchic principles of government by which the colony was being ruled. Professor Burt, indeed, has demonstrated in his definitive account of "the old province of Quebec" that there was a definite cleavage between the people on the one hand and the seigneurs who, to a degree, made common cause with the British administration. The patriarchial and theocratic society thus began to show the normal signs of historical change in the course of De 57

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Gaspe's lifetime (1786-1871). An Anglo-Saxon commercial aristocracy was establishing itself more and more firmly in Canada. The astoundingly rapid industrial development of New England was drawing large numbers of the younger generation south of the border like an irresistible magnet. The seigniorial system, now regarded as a vestige of a former age, was abolished by degrees in mid-century. No wonder that to some people French Canada seemed to be disintegrating before their very eyes, simultaneously invaded by les Anglais and depleted by les Bastonais. In this context one understands readily why De Gaspe felt impelled to put down on paper the old traditions before they should disappear. II

In the early pioneer days there was little or no indigenous literature in either French or English Canada. The colonist is too busy wrestling with his environment to find time for creative expression in the artistic realm. There were, indeed, writings dealing with Canada from the beginning. Rabelais' passing references to this country, for instance, were based on Jacques Cartier's diaries. The Jesuit fathers wrote fairly extensively on Canada in the seventeeth century in the course of their missionary activities here, but these and other writers of New France were Frenchmen who for one reason or another were concerned with Canada. With the cession of Canada to Britain in 1764 all hope of a flourishing cultural development was temporarily blighted. The intelligentsia had in the main returned to France and a certain lethargy settled over the nation. Thus the vital force with which the original colony was richly endowed remained dormant for a period. A visible change in spiritual climate, however, became abundantly evident by the middle of the last century. In the interval since the conquest the French colonist had been transformed into the French Canadian and it is he who now emerges, distinct from all other peoples. Certain events mark the steps in this national rebirth. Among them are the founding of the newspaper Le Canadien in Quebec in 1806, the 58

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appearance of the first hesitant literary steps in different periodicals, and the outbreak of rebellion in 1837, the same year as De Gaspe's son Philippe published Le Chercheur de tresors, according to its author the first roman de mamrs written and published in Canada. The truculent Institut Canadien de Montreal was founded in 1844. Fran~ois-Xavier Garneau published his Histoire du Canada in the years 1845-8, and Laval University was founded in 1852, assuring the survival of traditional values. With reference to the development of literature, Garneau's three volumes are by far the most telling of these events. It was the first important history of Canada from the pen of a native son. I like to think of it as a great sursum corda. Garneau proved to his countrymen that they had no cause for shame, no reason to hang their heads in the face of British scorn. It was the Canadiens who had played the heroic role in 1760. Success had not crowned their efforts, but failure was due simply to the malignity of fate. All witnesses agree that Garneau's revelations had an electrifying effect on the spirit of the nation. They provided just that injection of optimism coupled with a sense of personal worth necessary to revitalize many spheres of activity. Here, for instance, are the lyrical terms in which De Gaspe sums up their situation for his fellow French Canadians. Vous avez ete longtemps meconnus, mes anciens freres du Canada! Vous avez ete indignement calomnies. Honneur a ceux qui ont rehabilite votre memoire! Honneur, cent fois honneur a notre compatriote, M. Garneau, qui a dechire le voile qui couvrait vos exploits! Honte a nous, qui, au lieu de fouiller les anciennes chroniques si glorieuses pour notre race, nous contentions de baisser la tete sous le reproche humiliant de peuple conquis qu'on nous jetait a la face a tout propos! Honte a nous qui etions presque humilies d'etre Canadiens!

At the same time the exhilarating works of the French Romantic authors were circulating among Canadian readers. What a contrast with the measured and lifeless literary fare that had been read until then! The same ferment that had stirred the literary circles of Paris a generation previously was now acting upon the writers of Quebec. Rebirth of national pride thus coincided in French Canada with the 59

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exciting discovery of a new, freer, more lyrical literary climate. The spirit of the day is best symbolized in the persons of the three leading figures of the original movement, the historian Garneau, the poet Cremazie, and the young abbe Casgrain. It is not hard to picture the back room of Cremazie's book shop in Quebec where these three gathered to discuss the latest books from France, to read their own newest compositions, and to talk excitedly about the literary future. It is quite clear, therefore, why the first literary movement in Canada was romantic in spirit and nationalistic in tone. The proud glories of the past are a fitting theme for lyrical development in French Canada as in any nation. It is in this heroic atmosphere that De Gaspe made his contributions to literature and history. III

Philippe Joseph Aubert de Gaspe was born in 1786 into one of the most distinguished of Canadian families. He could count within his immediate family circle the noblest and proudest names of New France, Le Gardeur de Tilly, Coulon de Villiers, Tarieu de Lanaudiere, Le Moyne de Longueil, Boucher, and Baby, names representing dignity, military prowess, and administrative ability of the highest order. It is interesting that he was also a descendant of that intrepid heroine, Madeleine de Vercheres. His first Canadian ancestor, Charles Aubert de la Chesnaye, arrived in Canada from Amiens in 1655. He soon amassed a considerable fortune in trade, but then large fortunes came easier, of course, in the pre-income-tax era. Charles Aubert participated in wars against the Indians and the English, and acquired various seigneuries in New France and even in Newfoundland. For his outstanding services to the nation he received his patent of nobility from Louis XIV in 1693. Charles Aubert's son Pierre was the first member of the family to take the name de Gaspe; in the following generation comes Ignace Philippe Aubert de Gaspe, chevalier de l' ordre royal et militaire de Saint-Louis, seigneur de Saint60

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Jean Port-Joli, the grandfather of our author. Records show, incidentally, that he was the owner of Louise, one of the fifteen known slaves in Quebec in 1744. He commanded one of the four Canadian brigades that shared in the glory of defeating the British at Ticonderoga in 1758. Like so many others, the family was ruined by the Seven Years' War. The estate bearing the poetic name of Saint-Jean Port-Joli was situated on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River about sixty miles downstream from Quebec. On the grounds extending for two leagues along the river stood an impressive manor house in Norman style, steep-roofed and gabled, built of gray stone and graced with two stubby symmetrical wings projecting forward from the extremities of the fac;:ade. The general effect was one of simple dignity. Other buildings included the seigniorial mill, stables, and the dwellings of the tenants. This estate, with all others along the south shore, was burned and razed in 17 59 by the advancing British forces to prevent all effective support to the French garrison in Quebec during the siege. The only thing saved from the holocaust was the family silver which had been buried as a precaution; some pieces are still in the family's possession. After the war, the family lived for several years in three rooms in the mill. The manor was shortly rebuilt in wood, following the plan and the dimensions of the original structure. It is sad to relate that this second manor was burned in 1909; nothing but the memory of that stately home remains today at Saint-Jean Port-Joli, a memory represented by a small stone building dating from 1763 and flanked by a tablet bearing the inscription: "A few feet away stood the Aubert de Gaspe manoir. M. de Gaspe wrote Les Anciens Canadiens in this house." Pierre Ignace, the father of the author, was a student when the Americans attacked "the fourteenth colony" in 1775 and he volunteered to serve in defence of his country. Later in life, in 1812, he was appointed to the Legislative Council and before his death in 1823 he had re-established the family fortune. Philippe Aubert de Gaspe was born in Quebec in 1786 and spent his first nine years in the family manor at Saint61

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Jean Port-Joli. It was apparently an idyllic life passed in comfort and dignity in the midst of a devoted family that enjoyed respect on every hand. Among the countless visitors none is more distinguished than Lady Dorchester, wife of the Governor-General and a close friend of the author's mother, who spent part of several summers there. The family dog, Niger, was, in fact, a present from Lord Dorchester. When Philippe was nine, he was sent to the pension Cholette in Quebec. The demoiselles Cholette spoiled young Philippe completely and he, addressing himself mainly to the task of evading lessons, enjoyed teasing their brother, a simple man who idolized the young scamp. In 1798, however, things came to the point where his father put him in the Seminary to complete his education. In 1806 he began to study law in the offices of Jonathan Sewell who shortly was appointed Chief Justice of the province. Philippe remembered Chief Justice Sewell as an affable gentleman and an extremely upright legal mind, thoroughly convinced of British superiority. In 1811 De Gaspe married Suzanne Allison. Mme de Gaspe was the daughter of Thomas Allison, captain of the Fifth Regiment of the Line. He settled in Quebec in 1798; in 1810, as Justice of the Peace, he carried out the seizure of Le Canadien, the patriotic paper mentioned above, whose editors, MM. Bedard, Blanchet, and Taschereau, were incarcerated. Father-in-law Allison does not cut a very pretty figure in local history but his daughter was apparently a woman of outstanding beauty and charm. Family tradition has it that the clerks would leave their counters and gather at the front of the stores when she went shopping in the streets of Quebec. De Gaspe's aunt, moreover, Mlle Marguerite de Lanaudiere, is featured in an anecdote revealing comparable masculine admiration. A British garrison was stationed in Quebec City for a very long period, and the officers whiled away their tedious life in many ingenious ways. One particular sport was to take up their stand in a group outside the doors of churches after high mass on Sundays and stare rudely at the ladies of the parish as they left for home. If the weather was 62

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inclement and puddles covered the road at the bottom of the steps, it was often possible to arrange the grouping so that the ladies had to run a gauntlet of eyes as they raised their skirts and exposed a well-turned ankle for inspection. This was precisely the situation one Sunday when Mlle Marguerite emerged from church to be confronted with the serried ranks of leers and puddles. From what I have heard, I suspect that this good lady may have been a very genteel virago. She marched up to the group, staring them straight in the eye, and said, "If there is a single gentleman among you, he will make way!" They did. From 1813 to 1815 De Gaspe practised law in Quebec City. In 1816 he was appointed sheriff of the city and he exercised this function for six years. It was his privilege to proclaim the accession of George IV in 1820. In the normal course of duty he was able to soften the harsh processes of law for he was a humane man deeply shocked at the indignity of the pillory. In 1815 he had bought from his aunt Marguerite de Lanaudiere that interesting house on rue Saint-Louis in Quebec known to every tourist as "Montcalm's House." A very uncertain and recent legend has it that Montcalm was carried mortally wounded from the Plains of Abraham and died in the house. In any case its three rooms each with its fire-place, its garrets and gables, cellar, well, and stables were in De Gaspe's possession for nine years. De Gaspe seemed to be starting out on an impressive career. Many years later he wrote of himself at this stage of his life: Lorsque j'eus complete mes etudes, toutes les carrieres me furent ouvertes; je n'avais qu'a choisir; celle des armes s'offrait naturellement a un homme de ma naissance; mais il me repugnait de repandre le sang de mes semblables. J'obtins une place de haute confiance dans les bureaux. Avec mes dispositions, c'etait courir a ma perte. J'etais riche moi-meme; mon pere m'avait laisse une brillante fortune, les emoluments de ma place etaient considerables, je maniais a rouleaux l'or que je meprisais.

Two faults were to cause his downfall: his love of lavish entertainment and his foolhardy generosity. From discrete references one gathers that this period of his life was an end63

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less round of gay parties in which he was too often the host. At the same time he was endorsing cheques and standing guarantor for an endless list of friends and acquaintances. Incapable de refuser un service, ma main ne se ferma plus; je devins non seulement [le] banquier [de mes amis], mais, si quelqu'un avait besoin d'une caution, d'un endossement de billet, ma signature etait a la disposition de tout le monde.

It all ended in 1834 with the family fortune dissipated, his personal and business accounts hopelessly jumbled and an established debt to the Crown of £1,169 as guarantor of a personal note. Declared bankrupt in 1836, he was condemned as a debtor and all his personal property was seized. The evidence is rather clear that there was no malice aforethought on his part, no embezzlement of public funds, but simply thoughtless extravagance. Numerous people owed him sums of money but only one honoured his debt in this hour of need. J'etais jeune, trente-trois ans, age ou commence a peine la vie; j'avais des talents, de l'energie, et une foi robuste en moi-meme. Prenez, dis-je a mes creanciers, tout ce que je possede, mais renoncez a votre droit de contrainte de corps; laissez-moi toute liberte d'action, et j'emploierai toute mon energie a vous satisfaire.

This plea for physical freedom and an opportunity to make restitution fell on deaf ears and De Gaspe was confined in the common gaol of Quebec in 1838, there to remain for over three years. The experience ruined his career and broke his spirit. For years after he could think of hardly anything but the hardness of men's hearts. During his imprisonment two of his young children are said to have taken ill and lain for a period at death's door. It seems that he could see the light in the bedroom window from his cell but had no way of knowing whether his child was living or dying. This, he found, was the cruelest kind of torture that could be imposed on any man. C'est alors, o mon fils! que je ressentis toute la lourdeur de mes chaines. C'est alors que je pus m'ecrier comme la mere du Christ: Approchez et voyez s'il est douleur comparable a la miennel

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Finally, in 1841, a group of friends were able to put through Parliament "an act for the relief of Philippe Aubert de Gaspe." He retired to Saint-Jean Port-Joli, for the seigneury, being his in usufruct only, had escaped the financial debacle. The next years were spent in brooding, but reading and meditation gradually blunted his bitterness and he became a living legend, referred to as "le bon gentilhomme," kindly and gentle, a lover of children and animals. His reputation for misanthropy is belied by the love and esteem in which he was held by all who had dealings with him. He spent his time running his estate, raising his younger children (he had thirteen all told) and enjoying his many grandchildren and great-grandchildren who altogether numbered over one hundred at his death. He chatted with his tenants and with visitors and nomadic Indians. It is reported that when he received mail from overseas, the older habitants would inquire after the king and queen of France and their children. And he adds in his Memoires: C'est une chose curieuse que je n'aie jamais entendu un homme du peuple accuser Louis XV des desastres des Canadiens. . . . "C'est la Pompadour qui a vendu le pays a l'Anglais."

This is indeed the very spirit of Cremazie's poem "Le Drapeau de Carillon." We have now reached the year 1861. A new literary periodical, Les Soirees canadiennes, has just appeared with the stirring epigraph quoted from Charles Nodier, "Hatonsnous de raconter les delicieuses histoires du peuple avant qu'il ne les ait oubliees." De Gaspe took the exhortation to heart, assembled his notes and memories, and within two years appeared before the critic abbe Casgrain with a great bundle of a manuscript. To the astonishment of the priest, the pages of this man of seventy-seven contained the first authentic masterpiece of prose fiction in French-Canadian literature, Les Anciens Canadiens. The novel was an immediate success and its author was suddenly famous again in his old age. It was translated into English in 1864, the year following the first French edition (and again in 1890 by Charles G. D. Roberts). In 1865 its 65

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principal episodes were dramatized by two priests of the college at L' Assomption and performed by the students under the title of "Archibald de Lochiell." De Gaspe was invited for the premiere and he made a triumphal voyage by water from Montreal in a flag-bedecked ship, saluted all the way by musket-fire. His entry into the hall is equally dramatic; a newspaper account of the day puts it this way: A la premiere apparition de M. de Gaspe clans la salle, les spectateurs, qui attendaient avec anxiete, cederent aux elans de leur cceur et le re